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.
2,371 results for "Temple of the Feathered Serpent" — page 68 of 119
X_5_02 — Medical Illustration and Anatomical Art
Medical illustration and anatomical art — the visual representation of the human body for scientific and educational purposes — is a discipline where art and science converge with extraordinary results. The ability to ac
X_5_03 — Medical Genetics and Rare Diseases
Medical genetics is the branch of medicine concerned with the diagnosis, management, and counseling of individuals and families affected by genetic disorders — conditions caused by mutations in DNA, ranging from single-g
X_1_20 — Comparative Traditional Medicine: TCM, Ayurveda, Unani & Kampo
The world's major traditional medicine systems — Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Ayurveda (India), Unani (Greco-Arabic), and Kampo (Japan) — represent independent but structurally parallel attempts to systematize hea
X_1_04 — Egyptian and Mesopotamian Medicine: Papyri, Pharmacology
Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia produced the earliest known written medical records — the Edwin Smith Papyrus (~1600 BCE, copied from ~2500 BCE originals) represents the oldest known surgical text with its rational, case-b
X_1_14 — Medical Archaeology
Medical archaeology (also called paleopathology and bioarchaeology) is the study of disease, injury, healing, and medical practice in past populations using physical evidence — primarily skeletal remains, mummified tissu
X_4_04 — Nursing and Caregiving History
Nursing — the professional practice of patient care, health promotion, and illness prevention — has evolved from informal family and religious caregiving to a scientifically grounded profession. Pre-modern: caregiving fe
X_4_02 — Medical Ethics: Tuskegee, Helsinki, Informed Consent
The history of medical ethics is inseparable from the history of medical abuse — each major ethical framework emerged in direct response to documented exploitation. The Nuremberg Code (1947) establishing voluntary inform
X_4_06 — Dentistry and Oral Health History
Dentistry — the treatment of diseases and conditions of the oral cavity — has evolved from folk remedy and brutal extraction to a sophisticated medical specialty. Ancient: evidence of dental work extends to the Neolithic
X_4_14 — Global Health: Equity, Systems, and Planetary Well-Being
Global health is the field concerned with improving health and achieving health equity for all people worldwide — transcending national boundaries and addressing the determinants of health at population, environmental, a
X_4_09 — Public Health and Sanitation
Public health and sanitation — organized efforts to prevent disease, promote health, and prolong life through collective action — have arguably saved more lives than all other medical interventions combined. Clean water,
X_3_20 — Infectious Disease & Epidemiology
Infectious diseases have shaped human history more profoundly than any other biological force. The germ theory of disease, established by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch in the 1860s–1880s, transformed medicine from specul
X_3_26 — Chronobiology & Circadian Medicine
Chronobiology — the study of biological rhythms — has emerged from a niche curiosity to a Nobel Prize–winning discipline with profound implications for medicine, metabolism, and mental health. [KEY FINDING] The 2017 Nobe
X_3_08 — Cancer Research History
Cancer — the uncontrolled proliferation of abnormal cells — has been recognized since antiquity and remains the second leading cause of death globally (~10 million deaths in 2022, WHO). The history of cancer research is
X_3_11 — Battlefield Medicine: Surgical Innovation Under Fire
Battlefield medicine — the practice of treating wounded soldiers under active combat conditions — has been one of the most powerful and paradoxical engines of medical innovation in human history. The pressure of mass cas
X_3_04 — Forensic Medicine and Pathology
Forensic medicine — the application of medical knowledge to legal questions, especially the determination of cause, manner, and circumstances of death — has ancient roots but developed as a formal discipline primarily fr
X_3_16 — Allergy & Autoimmune Disease: Immune Dysregulation and Self-Recognition
Allergy and autoimmune disease represent opposite failures of immune discrimination: allergy is an exaggerated immune response to harmless environmental antigens (allergens), while autoimmune disease involves immune atta
X_3_01 — Surgical History: From Trepanation to Robotics
Surgery — the physical opening and manipulation of the body to treat disease, injury, or deformity — has one of the longest and most dramatic histories in medicine. Prehistory: trepanation (trephination) — cutting or bor
X_3_17 — Wound Healing: Coagulation, Tissue Repair, and Chronic Wounds
Wound healing is a highly coordinated biological process involving four overlapping phases: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. The coagulation cascade — a proteolytic chain reaction of clotting fact
X_3_15 — Endocrinology & Hormones
Endocrinology is the branch of medicine dealing with the endocrine system—a network of ductless glands that secrete hormones directly into the bloodstream to regulate metabolism, growth, reproduction, and homeostasis. Th
INTERDOC_71 — The NDE Paradox: Consciousness Without Neural Activity & Substrate Independence
The near-death experience (NDE) paradox is the question of whether subjective phenomenology reported during cardiac arrest reflects (a) post-hoc reconstruction during recovery, (b) hidden residual neural activity not cap
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