RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
129 results for "heat death" — page 5 of 7
Q_3_15 — Icy Moons: Europa, Titan, Enceladus, and Subsurface Oceans
Among the most transformative discoveries of planetary science in the past three decades is the realization that several moons of the outer solar system — Europa (Jupiter), Enceladus (Saturn), Titan (Saturn), and Ganymed
INTERDOC_23 — Placebo, Nocebo, and the Biology of Belief
[KEY FINDING] The placebo effect is not "fake medicine" — it involves genuine, measurable physiological changes mediated by endogenous neurotransmitter systems. Fabrizio Benedetti (University of Turin) has demonstrated:
ZB_5_17 — Constructal Law & Flow Architecture: Why Nature Branches the Way It Does
Most fractal descriptions of nature are descriptive: they observe that rivers branch like blood vessels, blood vessels branch like trees, trees branch like lightning bolts, and lightning bolts branch like river deltas. A
ZB_4_15 — Urban Wildlife Genomics: Rapid Evolution in the Anthropocene City
Cities — covering only ~3% of Earth's land surface but housing >55% of humanity — are emerging as powerful natural laboratories for studying rapid evolution in real time. Urban wildlife genomics investigates how the extr
ZB_4_05 — Urban Ecology: Nature in the City
Urban ecology studies the distribution, abundance, and interactions of organisms within cities and urbanized landscapes — environments that now house over 56% of humanity (projected ~68% by 2050) and cover ~3% of Earth's
ZB_3_09 — Mutualism and Cooperation in Nature
Mutualism — an interspecific interaction in which both partners benefit — is one of the most important ecological relationships on Earth, underpinning ecosystem function from coral reefs to forests to the human gut. The
G_4_20 — Thermodynamics and Ancient Energy Systems
Thermodynamics — the physics of heat, energy, work, and entropy — provides a powerful framework for understanding the energy systems underlying ancient civilizations: how societies captured, converted, stored, and utiliz
G_4_15 — Acoustic Archaeology — How Ancient Spaces Were Designed for Sound
Acoustic archaeology (archaeoacoustics) is the scientific study of how ancient built environments and natural spaces shaped sound and how sound was used in ritual, communication, and performance in the past. The field co
O_5_20 — Enceladus: Saturn's Ocean Moon and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life
Enceladus, a small icy moon of Saturn (504 km diameter, roughly the size of Arizona), has emerged since the Cassini mission's discoveries (2005–2017) as arguably the most promising location in the solar system for the de
T_1_03 — Transpersonal Psychology — Beyond the Personal Self
Transpersonal psychology extends psychological inquiry beyond the individual ego to encompass states of consciousness, spirituality, and experiences transcending ordinary personal identity. Emerging in the late 1960s fro
T_1_02 — Evolutionary Psychology — The Adapted Mind
Evolutionary psychology applies Darwinian natural and sexual selection to the human mind, proposing that cognitive mechanisms evolved as functional adaptations to recurrent problems faced by ancestral hunter-gatherers in
T_3_18 — Anomalistic Psychology
Anomalistic psychology is the scientific study of extraordinary human experiences — including apparent telepathy, precognition, ghost sightings, alien abduction reports, near-death experiences, and other phenomena tradit
D_2_06 — Ur: Woolley's Excavations, the Royal Cemetery, and the Standard of Ur
Ur (modern Tell al-Muqayyar, southern Iraq) is one of the most important archaeological sites in Mesopotamia. Leonard Woolley's excavations (1922–1934), conducted jointly by the British Museum and the University of Penns
D_5_12 — Masks, Ritual Objects, and Power Artifacts
Ritual objects — masks, amulets, relics, bundles, sacred vessels — are among humanity's most ancient artifacts and serve as interfaces between the human and spiritual worlds. Masks appear in the archaeological record fro
B_4_03 — Psychopomp Traditions — Guides of the Dead Across Cultures
A psychopomp (from Greek psychopompos — "guide of souls") is a being, deity, spirit, or figure whose primary function is to escort the dead from the world of the living to the afterlife. This is one of the most universal
L_4_14 — Ancient Pathogen Genomics
Ancient pathogen genomics — the recovery, sequencing, and analysis of pathogen DNA from archaeological remains — has revolutionized our understanding of past pandemics, pathogen evolution, and human-disease coevolution.
L_2_01 — Domestication Genetics — How Humans Reshaped Life
Domestication — the genetic transformation of wild species into human-dependent organisms — ranks among the most consequential biological processes in Earth's history.
L_5_06 — Genetic Adaptation to Disease: Malaria, Plague, TB
Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force on the human genome throughout history. Pathogens — particularly malaria, plague, tuberculosis, smallpox, and cholera — have killed more humans than all other
Y_4_03 — Shamanic Practices / Altered States Synthesis
Shamanic practices represent humanity's oldest spiritual technology, attested across every inhabited continent from at least 30,000 BCE (Upper Paleolithic cave art) to the present day. Despite vast cultural distances — g
Y_2_01 — NDEs, OBEs & Consciousness Studies
Modern consciousness research — NDEs in cardiac arrest patients, children's past-life memories, and DMT-induced entity encounters — produces data that intersects remarkably with ancient descriptions of death journeys, as
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields