RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
432 results for "color theory" — page 6 of 22
O_4_13 — Rainbow Mountains: Zhangye Danxia and Chromatic Geology
The world's "Rainbow Mountains" — strikingly multicolored geological formations displaying vivid bands of red, orange, yellow, green, blue-gray, and white rock — represent some of Earth's most visually spectacular natura
P_2_04 — Feminist Philosophy and Epistemology
Feminist philosophy is a diverse tradition that examines how gender — as a social, political, and conceptual category — shapes philosophical questions, knowledge production, moral reasoning, and political structures. Far
ZE_1_19 — Risk Ethics & the Precautionary Principle: Uncertainty, Decision-Making & Moral Responsibility
Risk ethics — the philosophical study of how moral agents should make decisions under conditions of uncertainty, incomplete information, and potentially catastrophic consequences — has become one of the most practically
N_3_12 — The Bavarian Illuminati — Documented History vs. Conspiracy
The Order of the Illuminati (Illuminatenorden) — founded on May 1, 1776, by Adam Weishaupt (1748–1830), a professor of canon law at the University of Ingolstadt in Bavaria — is simultaneously one of the best-documented h
R_4_12 — Mimicry: Batesian, Müllerian, and Aggressive Deception
Mimicry — the resemblance of one organism (the mimic) to another (the model) or to an environmental feature, evolved to deceive a third party (the signal receiver, typically a predator) — is one of the most elegant demon
ZA_2_19 — Holographic Principle & AdS/CFT Correspondence: Gravity as Information
The holographic principle — the proposition that all information contained within a volume of space can be encoded on the boundary surface enclosing that volume — ranks among the most profound conceptual shifts in theore
ZA_1_09 — Casimir Effect and Vacuum Energy Forces
The Casimir effect, predicted by Dutch physicist Hendrik Casimir in 1948 and experimentally confirmed with increasing precision since the late 1990s, is one of the most remarkable demonstrations that the quantum vacuum i
ZA_5_19 — Bekenstein Bound: Information Limits and the Physics of Black Holes
The Bekenstein bound — proposed by Jacob Bekenstein in 1981 — establishes a fundamental upper limit on the amount of information (entropy) that can be contained within a given region of space with a given amount of energ
ZA_5_11 — Quantum Chaos: Where Classical Chaos Meets Quantum Mechanics
Quantum chaos investigates the quantum-mechanical signatures of systems whose classical counterparts exhibit chaotic behavior — addressing the profound question of how quantum mechanics, which is fundamentally linear, en
V_4_13 — Mathematics of Voting: Arrow's Theorem, Fairness, and Electoral Systems
The mathematics of voting — a branch of social choice theory — applies rigorous mathematical analysis to the problem of aggregating individual preferences into collective decisions, revealing deep impossibility results t
V_4_21 — Cryptography & Mathematical Foundations
Cryptography — the science of secure communication — rests on some of the deepest results in number theory, algebra, and computational complexity. Modern public-key cryptography was born in 1976 when Whitfield Diffie and
V_3_15 — Functional Analysis: Infinite-Dimensional Spaces and Operators
Functional analysis — the study of infinite-dimensional vector spaces (function spaces) and the linear operators acting on them — is one of the great unifying frameworks of 20th-century mathematics. It provides the rigor
V_2_21 — Topology Applications in Science
Topology — the branch of mathematics concerned with properties preserved under continuous deformation (stretching, bending, twisting, but not tearing or gluing) — has transformed from an abstract mathematical discipline
V_2_17 — Homological Algebra: Chain Complexes, Exact Sequences, and Derived Functors
Homological algebra provides a powerful, abstract framework for studying algebraic structures — groups, rings, modules, sheaves — by analyzing chain complexes (sequences of abelian groups or modules connected by homomorp
M_4_13 — Earth Crustal Displacement: Hapgood's Theory and Its Legacy
Earth crustal displacement (ECD) — the hypothesis that the Earth's lithosphere can shift as a relatively intact shell over the underlying asthenosphere, rapidly relocating the geographic positions of continents relative
M_1_13 — Lycurgus Cup and Ancient Nanotechnology: Dichroic Glass
The Lycurgus Cup is a 4th-century CE Roman cage cup (diatretum) made of dichroic glass, currently in the collection of the British Museum (accession no. 1958,1202.1). It is the most complete surviving example, and one of
A_2_02 — Nag Hammadi & Gnostic Texts
The Nag Hammadi Library is a collection of 13 leather-bound papyrus codices containing 52 texts, discovered in 1945 near Nag Hammadi, Upper Egypt. Written in Coptic and dated to the 3rd–4th centuries CE (with originals p
A_2_05 — The Hermetic Tradition: Thoth, Hermes Trismegistus, and the Emerald Tablet
This document examines The Hermetic Tradition: Thoth, Hermes Trismegistus, and the Emerald Tablet, a topic within the Foundations research area. Notable findings include: Ancient Egyptian tradition describes a Book of Th
A_4_25 — Jain Agamas: Canonical Scriptures of Non-Violence and Asceticism
The Jain Agamas (Āgama, "tradition/scripture") are the canonical scriptures of Jainism, one of the world's oldest continuously practiced religions. The teachings are attributed to Mahāvīra (Vardhamāna, c. 599–527 BCE or
A_4_29 — Mongolian & Turkic Epic Traditions
The Mongolian and Turkic epic traditions constitute one of the world's great oral literary heritages, spanning from the Altai Mountains to Anatolia across more than two millennia. Central texts include the Secret History
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields