RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
2,302 results for "Magicians of the Gods" — page 5 of 116
ZH_4_02 — Precession in Ancient Culture: Hamlet's Mill Thesis
Hamlet's Mill: An Essay on Myth and the Frame of Time (1969), by MIT historian of science Giorgio de Santillana and ethnologist Hertha von Dechend, is one of the most intellectually ambitious — and controversial — works
ZF_2_17 — Chemosynthetic Ecosystem Evolution: Life Without Sunlight
Chemosynthetic ecosystems — communities of organisms that derive energy from chemical reactions (primarily the oxidation of hydrogen sulfide, methane, or hydrogen) rather than photosynthesis — represent one of the most t
K_3_16 — Anesthesia and Consciousness: What Going Under Reveals
General anesthesia provides a unique experimental window into consciousness: the ability to reversibly abolish and restore awareness in a controlled clinical setting. Despite over 175 years of practice since William T.G.
K_5_15 — Neural Fractals & the Edge of Chaos: Brain Criticality and Complexity
The brain is poised at a critical point between order and chaos — and its fractality is not an accident but a functional necessity. In 2003, John Beggs and Dietmar Plenz published one of neuroscience's landmark papers: t
INTERDOC_58 — The Mechanism of Suppression: Institutional Cognitive Dissonance from 4th-Century Councils to 21st-Century Peer Review
Suppression of inconvenient knowledge is not primarily about conspiracy. It is about a psychological-institutional mechanism that recurs across very different historical contexts using very different surface vocabularies
INTERDOC_11 — Mitochondrial Eve, Y-Chromosomal Adam, and the Convergence Problem
Mitochondrial Eve — the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of all living humans through an unbroken maternal line — was identified through mtDNA analysis by Rebecca Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Allan Wilson at UC Berkeley i
ZC_1_17 — Conspiracy Theory Epidemiology: Why People Believe and How Conspiracism Spreads
Conspiracy theories — explanatory frameworks that attribute significant events to the secret machinations of powerful, malevolent groups — are not a modern pathology but a recurring feature of human cognitive and social
G_2_15 — Cognitive Archaeology — Mind in the Archaeological Record
Cognitive archaeology investigates the cognitive abilities, mental processes, and symbolic capacities of past peoples through the material record they left behind — seeking to understand not just what ancient people did,
ZD_1_13 — Kolmogorov Complexity and Algorithmic Information Theory
Kolmogorov complexity (also called algorithmic complexity, descriptive complexity, or program-size complexity) — the length of the shortest computer program (on a fixed universal Turing machine) that produces a given str
ZD_1_14 — Type Theory: Lambda Calculus, Dependent Types, and the Curry-Howard Correspondence
Type theory is a foundational framework in mathematics, logic, and computer science that classifies values and expressions into types — categories that determine what operations are valid: a natural number can be added t
ZD_5_05 — Formal Methods: Mathematical Verification and Specification of Software
Formal methods are mathematically rigorous techniques for the specification, development, and verification of software and hardware systems — using formal (mathematical) languages to describe system behavior and mathemat
P_5_01 — Is Mathematics Discovered or Invented?
One of the oldest and most consequential questions in philosophy: Does mathematics exist independently of human minds (Platonism), or is it a human invention — a language we construct to describe patterns (formalism/cons
P_5_13 — Leibniz: Monads, Theodicy, and Pre-Established Harmony
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646–1716) was among the most versatile intellects in Western history — a mathematician, philosopher, logician, diplomat, jurist, historian, and engineer who co-invented the infinitesimal calcu
P_5_16 — Philosophy of Information: Data, Knowledge, and Meaning in the Digital Age
The philosophy of information (PI) is a relatively new branch of philosophy that investigates the conceptual nature and fundamental principles of information — including its dynamics, utilization, and science. The field
P_2_14 — Philosophy of Action: Agency, Intention, and Collective Action
The philosophy of action investigates the nature of human agency — what it means to act (as opposed to merely moving), what makes an action intentional, how reasons relate to causes, and how individual agency extends to
N_1_03 — Pythagorean Brotherhood as Proto-Secret Society
Pythagoras of Samos (~570-495 BCE) was a Greek philosopher, mathematician, and mystic who founded a communal religious-philosophical society in the Greek colony of Croton (modern Calabria, southern Italy) around 530 BCE.
N_1_14 — Pythagorean Brotherhood: Mathematics, Mysticism & Secret Knowledge
The Pythagorean Brotherhood (c. 530–400 BCE), founded by Pythagoras of Samos in Croton (southern Italy), was simultaneously a philosophical school, a religious community, and a political movement. The Pythagoreans are cr
N_3_09 — OTO Thelema and Aleister Crowley
Thelema is a philosophical and religious system developed by English occultist Aleister Crowley (1875–1947), centered on the principle "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law" — articulated in The Book of the La
R_5_14 — Thermoregulation: Endothermy, Ectothermy, and Metabolic Evolution
Thermoregulation — the ability to maintain body temperature within functional limits — is a fundamental challenge of animal life, and the strategies organisms employ span a continuum from pure ectothermy (relying on envi
S_2_18 — Biosecurity and Dual-Use Research: Risks of Advanced Biotechnology
Biosecurity — the prevention of misuse of biological agents, technologies, and knowledge for hostile purposes — has become a critical concern as advances in synthetic biology, DNA synthesis, gene editing (CRISPR-Cas9), a
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields