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2,317 results for "Pyramid of the Moon" — page 7 of 116
A_1_07 — Enuma Elish — The Babylonian Creation Epic
The Enuma Elish ("When on high…") is the Babylonian creation epic — a cosmogonic poem of approximately 1,100 lines inscribed on seven clay tablets, composed ca. 1100 BCE (though likely drawing on older traditions back to
A_2_19 — Apocalypse of Abraham: Jewish Pseudepigraphon and Cosmological Vision
The Apocalypse of Abraham is a Jewish pseudepigraphon composed in the late 1st or early 2nd century CE, surviving exclusively in Old Slavonic (Church Slavonic) manuscripts dating from the 14th century onward. The text co
A_2_11 — Book of Jubilees: Angelic Calendar and Retold Genesis
The Book of Jubilees (also called Leptogenesis or "Little Genesis") is a Second Temple Jewish text (composed c. 160–150 BCE) that retells the narrative of Genesis 1 through Exodus 12 as a revelation dictated to Moses on
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_3_09 — Ethiopian Sacred Texts Beyond the Kebra Nagast
The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church preserves the most expansive biblical canon in Christendom — 81 books, compared to 66 in the Protestant canon and 73 in the Roman Catholic canon — including texts considered apocryp
U_5_30 — Venus Figurines: Paleolithic Art, Fertility Symbolism, and the Female Form
Venus figurines — small statuettes of the female form, typically emphasizing breasts, abdomen, hips, and vulva while minimizing faces, arms, and feet — constitute one of the most widespread and enigmatic art traditions o
U_2_19 — Impressionism and Color Theory: Light, Perception, and the Science of Seeing
Impressionism — the most revolutionary art movement of the 19th century — emerged in Paris in the late 1860s–1870s through the work of Claude Monet (1840–1926), Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841–1919), Camille Pissarro (1830–1
X_5_18 — Binaural Beats: Auditory Processing, Brainwave Entrainment, and Therapeutic Claims
Binaural beats are an auditory perceptual phenomenon first described by Heinrich Wilhelm Dove in 1839: when two tones of slightly different frequencies are presented separately to each ear (e.g., 400 Hz left, 410 Hz righ
X_4_11 — Bioethics of Enhancement
The bioethics of enhancement addresses the moral, social, and philosophical questions raised by using medical and technological interventions not merely to treat disease or restore function, but to augment normal human c
X_4_13 — Palliative Care and Hospice: Medicine at the End of Life
Palliative care — specialized medical care focused on providing relief from the symptoms, pain, and stress of serious illness, with the goal of improving quality of life for both the patient and the family — and hospice
ZH_5_04 — Precession of the Equinoxes: Hipparchus, Axial Wobble, and the Great Year
The precession of the equinoxes — the slow, continuous westward shift of the equinoctial points (where the ecliptic crosses the celestial equator) along the ecliptic — is one of the most consequential astronomical phenom
C_1_07 — Hero's Journey and the Monomyth
Joseph Campbell's "Hero's Journey" (1949) proposes that the world's mythological narratives share a single underlying structure — the monomyth — in which a hero departs from the ordinary world, undergoes initiatory trial
C_5_01 — Cognitive Anthropology of Serpent Archetypes
This document examines the evolutionary and cognitive science explanations for why serpent beings appear in virtually every human culture. Snake Detection Theory (Isbell, 2009) proposes that primates evolved superior vis
C_5_04 — Zoroastrianism: The Demonization Pivot
Zoroastrianism (c. 1500–1000 BCE) introduced strict cosmic dualism — the absolute opposition of good (Ahura Mazda) and evil (Angra Mainyu/Ahriman) — and in doing so transformed serpent/dragon figures from ambiguous or po
C_3_10 — Sacrifice and Offering Across Civilizations
Sacrifice — the ritual destruction or relinquishment of something valuable to establish, maintain, or restore a relationship with sacred powers — is arguably the most universal and foundational religious act in human his
C_2_12 — Kukulkan / Quetzalcoatl — The Feathered Serpent Deep Dive
The Feathered Serpent is the most important and enduring deity/symbol complex in Mesoamerican civilization — spanning over 2,000 years (from Olmec iconography ~1200 BCE through the Spanish Conquest in 1521 CE) and appear
C_2_07 — Prometheus / Forbidden Knowledge Archetype
The Promethean archetype encodes one of the most persistent patterns in world mythology: a single being defies the ruling divine authority to transfer forbidden knowledge, fire, or technology to humanity — and is severel
C_2_11 — Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive
This document examines Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Etymology and Core Identity, Olmec Origins — The Earliest Evid
ZF_3_08 — Sunda Shelf and Southeast Asian Submerged Landscapes
The Sunda Shelf (or Sundaland) is one of Earth's largest continental shelves — an area of ~1.8 million km² (larger than the Indian subcontinent) that connects the islands of Borneo, Sumatra, Java, and Bali to peninsular
ZF_3_11 — The Sargasso Sea, Bermuda Triangle, and Western Atlantic Anomalies
The Sargasso Sea is the only "sea" in the world defined not by coastlines but by ocean currents — a roughly elliptical region (~3.1 million km²) in the western North Atlantic, bounded by the Gulf Stream (west), North Atl
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