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.
1,606 results for "tit for tat" — page 53 of 81
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_09 — Psychology of Learning and Conditioning
Learning — relatively permanent changes in behavior or behavioral potential resulting from experience — is the foundational process of behavioral adaptation. Three paradigms dominate: classical conditioning (Pavlov, 1927
T_1_16 — Positive Psychology: The PERMA Model and Human Flourishing
Positive psychology — the scientific study of optimal human functioning, well-being, and the conditions enabling individuals and communities to flourish — was formally launched as a distinct movement by Martin Seligman d
T_1_05 — Moral Psychology — Haidt, Kohlberg, Moral Foundations
Moral psychology — the empirical study of how humans make moral judgments and develop moral understanding — has undergone a revolution over the past two decades, shifting from Lawrence Kohlberg's rationalist stage theory
T_1_17 — Educational Psychology: Learning, Development, and Instruction
Educational psychology — the scientific study of how humans learn and how instructional environments can be optimized to support learning — integrates cognitive psychology, developmental theory, motivation research, and
T_3_06 — Psychology of Decision Making
The psychology of decision making — transformed by Kahneman & Tversky's heuristics and biases program (1970s) and formalized in prospect theory (1979, Nobel Prize in Economics 2002) — demonstrates that human judgment and
T_3_03 — Psychology of Memory — Encoding, False Memory, Memory Palace
The psychology of memory investigates how information is encoded, stored, consolidated, and retrieved — and how these processes can fail, distort, or be manipulated.
T_3_02 — Psychology of Creativity & Insight
The psychology of creativity investigates the cognitive processes, personality traits, environmental conditions, and neural mechanisms underlying the generation of novel and useful ideas, solutions, and products.
T_3_04 — Sleep Psychology and Dreams
Sleep occupies approximately one-third of human life yet its functions remain among the most actively investigated questions in neuroscience and psychology.
T_3_05 — Psychology of Motivation and Drive
Motivation — the processes that initiate, direct, and sustain goal-directed behavior — is one of psychology's most extensively studied domains, with applications spanning education, workplace productivity, health behavio
T_3_01 — Cognitive Biases & Heuristics
Cognitive biases are systematic deviations from rational judgment that arise from the brain's use of mental shortcuts (heuristics) to process complex information under uncertainty.
T_5_10 — The Psychology of Money: Behavioral Economics, Financial Decision-Making, and Wealth Psychology
The psychology of money explores how cognitive biases, emotional responses, social pressures, and personality traits systematically distort financial decision-making — departing dramatically from the "rational economic a
T_5_20 — Synesthesia & Cross-Modal Perception
Synesthesia is a neurological phenomenon in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway automatically triggers an involuntary experience in a second pathway — for example, seeing specific colors when reading le
D_2_11 — Abu Simbel: Ramesses II and Solar Engineering
Abu Simbel — twin rock-cut temples on the western bank of the Nile in southern Egypt (Nubia), near the modern border with Sudan — represents the apex of pharaonic monumental engineering and one of the most spectacular so
D_2_05 — Troy (Hisarlik): Schliemann, Stratigraphy, and the Birth of Field Archaeology
Troy (modern Hisarlik, northwestern Turkey) is one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world, identified with the legendary city of Homer's Iliad. The mound contains at least nine major stratigraphic layers sp
D_2_07 — Persepolis: Achaemenid Architecture, Apadana Reliefs, and Imperial Ideology
Persepolis (Old Persian: Pārsa; modern Takht-e Jamshid, Fars Province, Iran) was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, constructed primarily under Darius I (r. 522–486 BCE) and his son Xerxes I (r. 486
D_1_08 — Tiwanaku and Puma Punku Deep Dive
Tiwanaku, situated at 3,825m elevation on the Bolivian Altiplano near the shores of Lake Titicaca, was the highest-altitude imperial capital in the ancient world. Flourishing from approximately 300 to 1000 CE, its influe
D_1_15 — Angkor Thom and Bayon: Faces of the Devaraja
Angkor Thom ("Great City") — the last and most enduring capital city of the Khmer Empire — was built by Jayavarman VII (r. c. 1181–1218 CE) as a walled, moated urban complex of approximately 9 square kilometers in presen
D_1_09 — Newgrange, Knowth, and Passage Tomb Astronomy
Newgrange, constructed around 3200 BCE in the Boyne Valley (Brú na Bóinne) of County Meath, Ireland, is one of the most remarkable Neolithic structures in the world — older than the Egyptian pyramids by approximately 700
D_1_21 — Cahokia & Monks Mound: North America's Largest Pre-Columbian Settlement
Cahokia, located near present-day Collinsville, Illinois, was the largest and most complex pre-Columbian settlement north of Mexico, reaching its peak between approximately 1050 and 1200 CE during the Mississippian cultu
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