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533 results for "integrated information theory" — page 7 of 27
ZA_4_25 — Caloric Theory: The Heat Fluid That Built Thermodynamics
Caloric theory held that heat is a self-repelling, weightless, indestructible fluid — calorique — that flows from hotter bodies to cooler ones and can be stored within matter. Formalized by Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier i
ZA_4_22 — Superconductivity: BCS Theory to High-Temperature
Superconductivity — the complete vanishing of electrical resistance and the expulsion of magnetic fields below a critical temperature — was discovered by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes on April 8, 1911, in mercury at 4.2 K. The
ZA_4_16 — Semiconductor Physics: Band Theory, Transistors, and Modern Electronics
Semiconductor physics — the study of materials with electrical conductivity between that of conductors and insulators — underpins virtually all modern electronic technology. The development of band theory by Felix Bloch
ZA_3_12 — Lattice Gauge Theory and Non-Perturbative QCD
Lattice gauge theory — the formulation of quantum field theories on a discrete spacetime lattice rather than in continuous spacetime — is the only known first-principles method for making non-perturbative calculations in
ZA_3_08 — Unification Physics: Theory of Everything
Unification — the quest to describe all fundamental forces of nature within a single theoretical framework — is the most ambitious program in physics, tracing from Maxwell's unification of electricity and magnetism (1865
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_4_28 — Game Theory: Strategic Decision-Making and Evolutionary Dynamics
Game theory — the mathematical study of strategic interaction among rational agents — was formalized by John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern in Theory of Games and Economic Behavior (1944) and transformed by John Nash'
V_4_24 — Chaos Theory: Nonlinear Dynamics, Strange Attractors, and the Butterfly Effect
Chaos theory — the study of deterministic systems exhibiting sensitive dependence on initial conditions — emerged in the 1960s–70s as a revolutionary insight: simple mathematical equations can produce behavior so complex
V_2_19 — Category Theory: Abstract Structure, Functors & Topos Theory
Category theory — often called the "mathematics of mathematics" — provides a universal language for describing mathematical structures and the relationships between them, emphasizing morphisms (arrows, maps, transformati
W_5_24 — Civilization Collapse & Systems Fragility
Civilizational collapse — the rapid, significant decline of a complex society's political, economic, and social institutions — is a recurring pattern in human history. Major examples include the Western Roman Empire (476
K_5_15 — Neural Fractals & the Edge of Chaos: Brain Criticality and Complexity
The brain is poised at a critical point between order and chaos — and its fractality is not an accident but a functional necessity. In 2003, John Beggs and Dietmar Plenz published one of neuroscience's landmark papers: t
INTERDOC_62 — Chemical Language Systems: Information Encoding from Microbes to Consciousness
Bacterial quorum sensing molecules encode population-density commands with combinatorial logic-gate precision (Bassler and Losick, 2006); microbial short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) direct host immune programming, epigenet
INTERDOC_63 — Sensory Gating as Universal Consciousness Threshold Modulator
Melzack and Wall's gate control theory (1965, Science) demonstrated that pain perception is not direct signal transmission but filtered through a spinal "gate" modulated by large-fiber input, small-fiber input, and desce
ZC_5_17 — Ritual Efficacy Mechanisms: How Ritual Produces Real-World Effects
Ritual — formalized, repetitive, symbolic action that is culturally prescribed and often marked as distinct from ordinary behavior — is a universal feature of human societies, found in religious ceremonies, civic commemo
ZC_1_16 — The Impostor Phenomenon: Psychological Mechanisms and Prevalence of Self-Doubt in Achievement
The impostor phenomenon (IP) — the persistent internal experience of intellectual fraudulence despite objective evidence of competence and achievement — was first described by clinical psychologists Pauline Rose Clance a
G_3_18 — Hermeneutics and the Interpretation of Ancient Texts
Hermeneutics — the theory and methodology of interpretation — addresses the fundamental problem confronting all study of ancient texts: how can modern readers recover meaning from documents produced in radically differen
G_2_15 — Cognitive Archaeology — Mind in the Archaeological Record
Cognitive archaeology investigates the cognitive abilities, mental processes, and symbolic capacities of past peoples through the material record they left behind — seeking to understand not just what ancient people did,
ZD_1_08 — Lambda Calculus and Functional Programming
Lambda calculus, invented by Alonzo Church in the 1930s as a formal system for expressing computation via function abstraction and application, stands alongside Turing machines as a foundational model of computation. Chu
ZD_1_09 — Conway's Game of Life and Recreational Mathematics
Conway's Game of Life (1970), a two-dimensional cellular automaton devised by mathematician John Horton Conway (1937–2020), stands as perhaps the most famous example of how astonishingly complex behavior can arise from e
ZD_5_03 — Semiotics: Signs, Symbols, and Meaning Theory
Semiotics (also semiology) — the study of signs, symbols, and meaning-making processes — is a foundational discipline that bridges linguistics, philosophy, cultural studies, communication theory, visual arts, and informa
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