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.
3,569 results for "de re publica" — page 67 of 179
ZC_3_07 — Disability Studies
Disability studies is an interdisciplinary field examining disability as a social, cultural, and political phenomenon rather than a purely medical one. The foundational distinction is between the medical model (disabilit
ZC_5_20 — Post-Truth & Misinformation
"Post-truth" — named Oxford Dictionaries' Word of the Year in 2016 and defined as "relating to circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal be
ZC_5_11 — Digital Sociology: Platforms, Surveillance Capitalism, and Algorithmic Governance
Digital sociology examines how digital technologies — the internet, social media platforms, smartphones, algorithms, artificial intelligence, data analytics, and digital infrastructure — transform social life, institutio
ZC_1_15 — Sociology of Emotions
Sociology of emotions examines how emotions are socially shaped, managed, and structured — challenging the assumption that feelings are purely biological or individual. Arlie Russell Hochschild (The Managed Heart, 1983)
ZC_1_14 — Social Media Psychology
Social media usage is now near-universal among adolescents and young adults in developed nations (95% of US teens, Pew 2023), making its psychological effects one of the most debated topics in contemporary psychology. Th
ZC_1_12 — Industrial-Organizational Psychology
Industrial-organizational (I/O) psychology applies psychological principles to workplace behavior — encompassing personnel selection, performance evaluation, motivation, leadership, organizational culture, team dynamics,
ZC_4_03 — Ethnomusicology — Music as Social Phenomenon
Ethnomusicology — the study of music in its cultural context, or more precisely, the study of music as culture and culture as expressed through music — emerged in the mid-20th century from the older discipline of "compar
ZC_2_17 — Institutional Change Theory: How Organizations, States, and Systems Transform
Institutional change theory — the study of how formal and informal rules, norms, and organizations originate, persist, transform, and collapse — is central to understanding political, economic, and social development. Th
ZC_2_15 — Media Studies and Communication Theory
Media studies and communication theory examine how media technologies and institutions produce, distribute, and shape public meaning. Marshall McLuhan (Understanding Media, 1964) argued "the medium is the message" — the
ZC_2_19 — World-Systems Theory — Wallerstein
World-systems theory, developed by Immanuel Wallerstein (1930–2019) beginning with The Modern World-System I (1974), provides a macro-sociological framework for understanding global inequality, economic development, and
ZC_2_14 — Sociology of the Family
Sociology of the family examines how families are structured, how they function as social institutions, and how they have transformed historically. Talcott Parsons (1955) theorized the mid-20th-century American nuclear f
G_4_18 — Biogeography and Ancient Distribution Patterns
Biogeography — the study of the spatial distribution of organisms across the planet, both present and past — is one of the most powerful frameworks for understanding Earth history, evolutionary processes, and the mechani
G_4_02 — Astrology as Historical Force and Political Tool
Astrology — the interpretation of celestial positions as meaningful for human affairs — is distinct from archaeoastronomy (→ [D_5_08](../../D_Sites_and_Artifacts/D5_Sacred_Geometry_Art_Symbolism/D_5_08_Archaeoastronomy_S
G_4_06 — Sound Healing — Evidence, Pseudoscience, and Ancient Practice
Sound healing occupies a uniquely contested space where genuine medical science, ancient spiritual practice, and modern pseudoscience coexist and often blur together. On one end, music therapy is FDA-recognized for pain
G_4_08 — Graham Hancock — Data-Driven Evaluation of Claims
Graham Hancock (b. 1950, Edinburgh) is a British journalist and author who has become the most prominent advocate of the "lost civilization" hypothesis — the idea that an advanced civilization existed before the end of t
G_4_17 — Microbiome Archaeology — Ancient Gut and Soil Microbes
Microbiome archaeology — the extraction and analysis of ancient microbial communities from archaeological materials (dental calculus, coprolites, mummified remains, soil sediments, ceramics) — has emerged since ~2012 as
G_1_04 — Isotope Analysis and Provenance Studies
Isotope analysis — the measurement of ratios of stable or radiogenic isotopes preserved in human bone, tooth enamel, animal remains, ceramics, metals, and organic residues — has become one of the most powerful tools in m
G_1_16 — Ground-Penetrating Radar in Archaeological Prospection
Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) is a non-invasive geophysical survey technique that transmits short pulses of electromagnetic (radar) energy into the ground and records the reflections returned from subsurface interfaces
G_1_06 — Paleoproteomics — Ancient Proteins Beyond DNA
Paleoproteomics is the extraction, identification, and analysis of ancient proteins from archaeological and paleontological materials — an emerging molecular method that extends biological identification far beyond the t
G_3_02 — Simulation Theory
Simulation Theory proposes that our perceived reality is a computational simulation running on substrate beyond our direct observation. Bostrom's trilemma (2003) provides the logical scaffolding (Tier 1), quantization of
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