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1,092 results for "responsible AI" — page 5 of 55
U_2_07 — Mosaic and Tile Art
Mosaic — images or patterns created from small pieces (tesserae) of stone, glass, ceramic, or other materials set in mortar — is one of the most durable art forms, with surviving examples spanning 4,000+ years. Origins:
X_2_03 — Psychedelic Medicine: Clinical Evidence and Renaissance
The psychedelic renaissance — the resurgence of clinical research into psychedelic compounds after decades of prohibition — represents one of the most significant paradigm shifts in modern psychiatry. Psilocybin for trea
X_5_18 — Binaural Beats: Auditory Processing, Brainwave Entrainment, and Therapeutic Claims
Binaural beats are an auditory perceptual phenomenon first described by Heinrich Wilhelm Dove in 1839: when two tones of slightly different frequencies are presented separately to each ear (e.g., 400 Hz left, 410 Hz righ
X_3_17 — Wound Healing: Coagulation, Tissue Repair, and Chronic Wounds
Wound healing is a highly coordinated biological process involving four overlapping phases: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. The coagulation cascade — a proteolytic chain reaction of clotting fact
X_3_24 — Gastroenterology: Microbiome Therapeutics, IBD & Gut-Brain Axis
Gastroenterology — the study and treatment of the digestive system — has undergone a revolution driven by three transformative discoveries: the bacterial etiology of peptic ulcers, the gut microbiome's role in systemic h
W_4_12 — Tiwanaku: Altiplano Civilization and Raised-Field Agriculture
Tiwanaku (also spelled Tiahuanaco) was a major pre-Columbian civilization centered at the site of the same name on the Bolivian Altiplano (high plateau), approximately 3,850 meters above sea level and 20 km southeast of
W_1_21 — Minoan Civilization: Detailed Analysis
The Minoan civilization of Crete (c. 2700–1450 BCE) was the first advanced civilization in Europe and one of the most remarkable cultures of the Bronze Age Mediterranean. Named by archaeologist Sir Arthur Evans (1851–194
W_3_21 — The Songhai Empire: West Africa's Largest Pre-Colonial State
The Songhai Empire (c. 1464–1591 CE) was the largest state in African history, controlling approximately 1.4 million km² of West Africa at its peak under Askia Muhammad I (r. 1493–1528). Rising from the declining Mali Em
W_3_05 — Haitian Vodou and Afro-Diasporic Syncretic Religions
Afro-Diasporic religions — including Haitian Vodou, Cuban Santería (Regla de Ocha), Brazilian Candomblé, and related traditions — represent one of the most extraordinary examples of cultural survival and creative synthes
W_2_14 — Song Dynasty: Chinese Technological Renaissance
The Song Dynasty (960–1279 CE) — divided into the Northern Song (960–1127, capital Kaifeng) and the Southern Song (1127–1279, capital Hangzhou/Lin'an after the loss of northern China to the Jurchen Jin dynasty) — represe
W_2_05 — Jain Cosmology and Non-Violence Philosophy
Jainism is one of the world's oldest living religions, with roots extending to at least the 9th century BCE and traditional claims reaching far deeper into prehistory. Its cosmological system describes a vast, uncreated,
W_2_02 — Angkor Wat, Khmer Cosmology, and Hindu-Buddhist Temple Mountains
Angkor Wat is the largest religious monument ever built — a 162.6-hectare temple complex in northwestern Cambodia, constructed under King Suryavarman II (r. ~1113-1150 CE) as a Hindu temple dedicated to Vishnu. It repres
W_2_09 — Ainu Mythology and Bear Ceremonialism
The Ainu are the Indigenous people of Hokkaido (northern Japan), Sakhalin, and the Kuril Islands, whose cosmological system centers on the concept of kamuy — divine spirits that inhabit all natural phenomena and voluntar
W_5_05 — Southeast Asian Spirit Traditions (Thai, Burmese, Khmer)
Southeast Asia presents one of the world's most complex religious landscapes, where Theravada Buddhism has been practiced for over a millennium in deep synthesis with pre-Buddhist animistic traditions rather than displac
W_5_28 — Tairona Civilization and Ciudad Perdida
The Tairona were a complex chiefdom-level society that flourished in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta mountains of northern Colombia from approximately 200 CE to the Spanish conquest (~1600 CE). Their most spectacular ac
ZH_2_11 — Southeast Asian Astronomy: Thai, Burmese, Khmer, and Indonesian Traditions
The astronomical traditions of Southeast Asia — Thailand (Siam), Myanmar (Burma), Cambodia (Khmer), Java, Bali, and the wider Malay-Indonesian archipelago — represent a distinctive synthesis of Indian, indigenous, and (i
C_1_08 — Twin Mythology — Duality, Doubling, and the Divine Pair
Twin mythology represents one of the most widely distributed narrative patterns in world religion — divine or semi-divine twins appear across every major cultural tradition: the Vedic Ashvins, Greek Dioscuri (Castor and
C_1_19 — The Triple Goddess Pattern: Maiden, Mother, Crone
The Triple Goddess — typically expressed as Maiden, Mother, and Crone corresponding to the waxing, full, and waning moon — represents one of the most influential archetypes in comparative mythology and modern Paganism, t
C_1_13 — Sacred Mountains and the Cosmic Mountain
The sacred mountain is one of humanity's most enduring religious symbols — a vertical axis connecting earth and heaven that appears in virtually every major civilization. From Mount Meru at the center of Hindu-Buddhist-J
C_4_12 — Hawaiian Mythology and Kahuna Tradition
Hawaiian mythology represents one of the most elaborately preserved Polynesian cosmological systems, anchored by the Kumulipo — a 2,102-line genealogical creation chant that traces existence from primordial darkness thro
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