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107 results for "Set" — page 5 of 6
R_1_06 — Symbiogenesis — Lynn Margulis and Cooperative Evolution
Symbiogenesis — the evolutionary origin of new organisms, organelles, or metabolic capabilities through the permanent merger of previously independent life forms — is one of the most consequential biological discoveries
S_4_02 — Space Exploration, Astrobiology, and Humanity's Cosmic Future
Humanity stands at the threshold of becoming a multi-planetary species — and possibly discovering extraterrestrial life within the next few decades. Mars remains the primary near-term target, with NASA's Artemis program,
F_1_09 — Austronesian Expansion: The Greatest Maritime Migration
The Austronesian expansion is the most extensive pre-modern maritime migration in human history, covering over half the globe — from Taiwan to Madagascar, Easter Island, Hawaii, and New Zealand — over approximately 5,000
F_4_28 — Austronesian Expansion & Polynesian Navigation
The Austronesian expansion is the greatest maritime migration in human history — spanning from Taiwan (c. 3000 BCE) across Island Southeast Asia, Melanesia, and into the vast Pacific, ultimately reaching Madagascar (west
F_4_05 — Sea Peoples and Bronze Age Collapse
This document examines Sea Peoples and Bronze Age Collapse, a topic within the Lost Connections research area. Key areas of investigation include The Interconnected World of ~1400–1200 BCE, The Amarna Letters — Evidence
F_4_04 — Post-Catastrophe Knowledge Preservation
If advanced civilization existed before the Younger Dryas impact (~12,800 years ago), how could its knowledge survive total civilizational collapse? This is not an idle question — it is the central engineering problem of
F_4_01 — Atlantis
Atlantis is the most famous lost-civilization tradition in the Western world — a powerful island empire described by Plato in two dialogues (~360 BCE) that was destroyed by the gods and "swallowed up by the sea" in a sin
ZA_2_13 — Quantum Gravity Approaches
Quantum gravity is the unfinished quest to unify general relativity (GR) — which describes gravity as spacetime curvature at macroscopic scales — with quantum mechanics (QM), which governs microscopic physics. The challe
ZA_2_01 — Time: Physics and Philosophy
Time is arguably the deepest unsolved problem in physics and philosophy. Physics reveals: (1) time is relative, not absolute — Einstein showed it flows at different rates depending on velocity and gravity; (2) the fundam
ZA_1_16 — Sonoluminescence: Light from Sound and the Mystery of Collapsing Bubbles
Sonoluminescence is the emission of short bursts of light from gas bubbles in a liquid when excited by ultrasonic sound waves. First observed by H. Frenzel and H. Schultes at the University of Cologne in 1934 (multi-bubb
ZA_4_17 — Polymer Science: From Bakelite to Bioplastics
Polymer science — the study of macromolecules composed of repeating monomer units — underpins materials from natural rubber and silk to modern plastics, synthetic fibers, and biomedical implants. Hermann Staudinger's 192
I_2_06 — Soviet and Russian UAP Programs
The Soviet Union maintained a long and largely secret institutional engagement with unidentified aerial phenomena, running parallel to but independently of American programs. The earliest formal effort was the Stolyarov
V_1_02 — Infinity, Paradoxes, and Mathematical Philosophy
Infinity has been a source of wonder, terror, and paradox since the ancient Greeks first grappled with Zeno's paradoxes of motion. Georg Cantor's revolutionary set theory (1870s-1890s) proved that infinities come in diff
V_4_03 — Geometric Probability and Buffon's Needle
Geometric probability assigns probabilities to random geometric events — needle drops, random points in regions, random lines intersecting figures — formalizing questions that blend chance with spatial structure. Buffon'
V_4_01 — Discrete Mathematics and Logic
Discrete mathematics — the study of mathematical structures that are countable, separated, or distinct (as opposed to continuous) — provides the theoretical bedrock for computer science, digital communication, and rigoro
V_3_08 — Fractal Geometry: Self-Similarity Across Scales
Fractal geometry, developed primarily by Benoit Mandelbrot (1975-1982), studies shapes with self-similar structure at multiple scales — coastlines, fern leaves, blood vessel networks, galaxy distributions, and financial
V_3_13 — Nonlinear Dynamics and Bifurcation Theory
Nonlinear dynamics studies systems whose behavior is not proportional to their inputs — where small changes can produce large effects, qualitative transitions, and deterministic chaos. While linear systems superpose pred
V_2_13 — Measure Theory and Integration
Measure theory provides the rigorous mathematical foundation for the concepts of length, area, volume, and probability — and the integration theory built upon them. Developed primarily by Henri Lebesgue (1902), it resolv
E_2_06 — Black Death, Pandemic Cycles, and Civilizational Reset
The Black Death (1347–1353 CE) was the most devastating pandemic in recorded human history. Caused by the bacterium *Yersinia pestis and transmitted primarily through flea bites from infected rats, the plague killed an e
INTERDOC_57 — Cascade Pattern Across Civilization Resets
Three civilization-altering events — the Younger Dryas climate reversal (c. 12,800 years ago), the Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1177 BCE), and the Justinianic Plague (541–549 CE and centuries of recurrence) — share struc
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