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.
3,721 results for "i ching" — page 55 of 187
K_5_07 — Psychophysics: Measuring the Relationship Between Mind and World
Psychophysics — literally "the physics of the soul/mind" — is the scientific study of the quantitative relationship between physical stimuli and the sensations and perceptions they produce. Founded by Gustav Theodor Fech
K_5_09 — Consciousness and Time Perception: How the Brain Creates Now
Time is perhaps the most intimate dimension of consciousness: every conscious experience occurs in time, and our sense of temporal flow — the feeling that time "passes," that the present moment is real and moving forward
K_5_05 — Consciousness and Information Integration: Phi and Its Critics
Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed primarily by neuroscientist Giulio Tononi (b. 1960) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with significant contributions from Christof Koch (Allen Institute for Brain Scie
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
K_5_21 — Entoptic Phenomena: Neural Basis of Universal Visual Patterns
Entoptic phenomena are visual experiences generated within the eye or visual nervous system rather than by external stimuli. They include phosphenes (light flashes from pressure on the eye or electrical stimulation), for
E_3_15 — Sea-Level Curves: Eustatic Change from LGM to Present
Sea-level curves — graphical reconstructions of how global mean sea level has changed through time — represent one of the most important datasets in Quaternary science, recording the waxing and waning of continental ice
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_19 — Volcanic Aerosol Forcing and Historical Climate Disruption
Explosive volcanic eruptions inject sulfur dioxide (SO₂) into the stratosphere, where it converts to sulfate aerosol particles (H₂SO₄) that reflect incoming solar radiation and cool Earth's surface for 1–3 years. This pr
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
E_3_21 — The 5.9 Kiloyear Event: Saharan Desiccation & the Birth of River Civilizations
The 5.9 kiloyear event (c. 3900 BCE) marks the terminal phase of the African Humid Period — a 6,000-year interval during which the Sahara was a grassland savanna supporting abundant lakes, rivers, and human populations.
E_3_08 — Dansgaard-Oeschger Events and Abrupt Climate Change
Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) events are rapid climate oscillations during the last glacial period (c. 115,000–11,700 years ago) characterized by abrupt warming of 5–16°C in Greenland within decades — among the most dramatic a
E_3_18 — Black Mat: Younger Dryas Boundary Layer Geochemistry
The "black mat" is a thin, dark, organic-rich sedimentary layer found at dozens of archaeological and geological sites across North America, dating to the onset of the Younger Dryas stadial (~12,800 cal BP). First system
E_3_01 — Rise and Fall of Civilizations
Every complex civilization in recorded history has collapsed or been transformed beyond recognition. The Bronze Age collapse (~1177 BCE) destroyed the interconnected civilizations of the eastern Mediterranean within a si
E_3_13 — Storegga Slide: Mega-Tsunami and Mesolithic Europe
The Storegga Slide (Norwegian: Storegga-raset; Store = "great," egga = "edge") — a series of submarine landslides on the continental slope off western Norway at approximately 64°N — constitutes one of the largest known m
E_3_20 — Dansgaard-Oeschger Events: Rapid Climate Oscillations
Dansgaard-Oeschger (D-O) events are rapid climate oscillations first identified in Greenland ice cores, characterized by abrupt warming of 8–16°C over Greenland within decades, followed by gradual cooling over centuries
E_3_17 — Environmental Catastrophe–Civilization Correlation Timeline
Systematic cross-referencing of paleoclimate proxy records (ice cores, speleothems, tree rings, marine sediments) with archaeological and historical records reveals repeated correlations between abrupt environmental shif
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