RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,066 results for "limits to growth" — page 50 of 104
K_2_03 — Neural Correlates of Consciousness
The neural correlates of consciousness (NCC) are the minimal neuronal mechanisms jointly sufficient for any one specific conscious experience. The systematic search for NCCs was launched by Francis Crick and Christof Koc
K_2_10 — Neural Entrainment: External Rhythmic Brain Synchronization
Neural entrainment — the process by which rhythmic external stimuli (sound, light, tactile vibration, or electromagnetic fields) synchronize the timing of neural oscillations in the brain — is a well-established neurophy
K_2_14 — Brain Lateralization and Consciousness: The Divided Brain
Hemispheric lateralization — the functional specialization of the two cerebral hemispheres — is one of the most robust findings in neuroscience and has profound implications for understanding consciousness. The left hemi
K_2_11 — Default Mode Network: Brain at Rest and Self-Referential Consciousness
The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a large-scale brain network that is most active when a person is not focused on the external environment — during mind-wandering, daydreaming, self-referential thought, autobiographical
K_2_09 — Neuroscience of Free Will
The neuroscience of free will centers on experiments testing whether conscious intention precedes or follows the neural preparation for action. Benjamin Libet's landmark 1983 experiments showed that the brain's "readines
K_2_13 — Attention Networks: Dorsal, Ventral, and Salience Systems
Attention — the selective allocation of processing resources to particular stimuli, locations, or tasks — is among the most studied phenomena in cognitive neuroscience and is intimately linked to consciousness: what we a
K_2_08 — The Binding Problem in Consciousness
The binding problem asks how the brain creates unified, coherent conscious experiences from the distributed, specialized processing activity of millions of neurons across separate brain regions. When you see a red ball r
K_5_10 — Theories of Self: No-Self, Minimal Self, Narrative Self
The self — the sense of being a unified, continuous subject of experience — is one of the most fundamental yet puzzling features of consciousness. Who or what is the "I" that sees, thinks, remembers, and acts? Theories o
K_5_02 — Pain, Consciousness, and the Nature of Suffering
Pain is one of the most philosophically revealing phenomena in consciousness studies: it is simultaneously a sensory detection system, an emotional experience, a cognitive evaluation, and a social communication — and the
K_5_04 — Neuroscience of Belief
Belief — the mental state of holding something to be true — is a cornerstone of conscious experience, shaping perception, memory, emotion, decision-making, and behavior. The neuroscience of belief has revealed that belie
K_5_20 — Psychoneuroimmunology: Mind-Body-Immune Connections
Psychoneuroimmunology (PNI) — the study of interactions between psychological processes, the nervous system, and immune function — has established that the mind directly influences immune defense and that immune activity
K_5_17 — Neuroplasticity, Cortical Reorganization, and Brain Self-Repair
Neuroplasticity — the brain's ability to reorganize its structure, function, and connections in response to experience, injury, or environmental demand — has transformed neuroscience from a static model ("the adult brain
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
K_5_11 — Synaesthesia and Consciousness: Cross-Modal Binding
Synaesthesia (British spelling; "synesthesia" in American English) is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway automatically triggers an involuntary experience in a second, unstim
K_5_03 — Psychosomatic Medicine and Mind–Body Interaction
Psychosomatic medicine investigates the bidirectional relationship between psychological processes and physical health — how mental states, emotions, beliefs, and social contexts influence bodily disease, and how physica
K_5_22 — Frequency Following Response (FFR)
The Frequency Following Response (FFR) is a sustained, phase-locked far-field electrophysiological response that tracks the periodicity of acoustic stimuli with sub-millisecond precision, generated primarily in the audit
K_5_01 — Neurophenomenology and First-Person Science
Neurophenomenology — the research program proposed by Francisco Varela (1996) — seeks to bridge the "explanatory gap" between objective neuroscience and subjective experience by integrating rigorous first-person phenomen
E_3_04 — Doggerland and Sundaland — Drowned Continental Shelves
Doggerland and Sundaland represent two of the most significant landmasses lost to post-glacial sea level rise, together encompassing hundreds of thousands of square kilometers of habitable terrain that was progressively
E_3_05 — Megafauna Extinction — Overkill, Climate, or Cosmic Impact?
The late Quaternary megafauna extinction represents one of the most dramatic biodiversity losses in the last 66 million years, eliminating approximately 178 species of large-bodied mammals (≥44 kg) across six continents
E_3_11 — Earthquake Archaeology and Seismic Catastrophes
Archaeoseismology — the study of past earthquakes using archaeological evidence — reveals that seismic catastrophes have repeatedly destroyed, reshaped, and sometimes permanently ended ancient urban centers and entire ci
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields