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1,108 results for "AI warfare" — page 8 of 56
ZB_2_09 — Biological Regeneration: Limb Regrowth and Tissue Repair
The ability to regenerate lost body parts varies enormously across the animal kingdom. Planarian flatworms can rebuild an entire organism from a fragment 1/279th of the original. Salamanders regenerate complete limbs, ja
ZB_5_27 — Human Microbiome: Gut-Brain Axis and Microbial Ecology
The human body hosts approximately 38 trillion microbial cells — roughly equal to the number of human cells — comprising ~3,000 species of bacteria, archaea, fungi, and viruses, collectively termed the microbiome. The Hu
ZB_4_12 — Landscape Ecology: Patches, Corridors, and Mosaics
Landscape ecology studies how spatial patterns of ecosystems — the arrangement, size, shape, and connectivity of habitat patches within a heterogeneous landscape mosaic — influence ecological processes including species
ZB_3_11 — Tropical Rainforest Ecology: Earth's Richest Biome
Tropical rainforests — evergreen broadleaf forests occurring in equatorial zones receiving >2,000 mm annual rainfall with no pronounced dry season and temperatures averaging 25–27°C year-round — cover approximately 6–7%
ZC_2_18 — Societal Collapse — Tainter's Complexity Theory
Joseph Tainter's The Collapse of Complex Societies (1988) proposed one of the most influential theoretical frameworks for understanding why civilizations fail: societies collapse when the marginal returns on increasing c
ZC_2_01 — Propaganda, Persuasion, and Information Warfare
Propaganda and persuasion studies span rhetoric, psychology, political science, and media studies. From Edward Bernays's Freudian public relations (1928) and Walter Lippmann's manufactured consent (1922), through Goebbel
G_3_04 — Schumann Resonance & Frequency Claims
Schumann resonances (~7.83 Hz fundamental) are Tier 1 atmospheric physics — experimentally verified electromagnetic standing waves in the Earth-ionosphere cavity (Schumann 1952, Balser & Wagner 1960). The numerical coinc
G_3_08 — Water Anomalies — Structured Water, Memory Claims, and EZ Water
Water (H₂O) is simultaneously the most familiar and most anomalous substance on Earth. Its seemingly simple molecular structure belies a staggering array of anomalous properties — at least 72 documented anomalies compare
G_3_24 — Post-Normal Science: Funtowicz, Ravetz, and Uncertainty
Post-normal science (PNS) is a framework for understanding and managing scientific inquiry when facts are uncertain, values in dispute, stakes high, and decisions urgent — conditions that characterize many of the most cr
O_1_09 — Persinger's Tectonic Strain Theory and Geomagnetic Anomalies
Michael Persinger (1945–2018), a neuroscientist at Laurentian University (Sudbury, Ontario), developed the Tectonic Strain Theory (TST) — a hypothesis proposing that stress accumulating along geological fault zones produ
O_4_08 — Fairy Circles and Patterned Ground
Earth's landscapes display numerous striking self-organized geometric patterns — regular arrangements of vegetation, soil, stones, or ice that emerge spontaneously from physical and biological processes without any exter
O_4_10 — Megafloods: Missoula, Altai, and Catastrophic Hydrology
Megafloods — catastrophic, high-discharge flooding events far exceeding any observed in historical times — have repeatedly reshaped Earth's surface, carving immense channels, depositing giant ripple marks and boulders, a
O_5_16 — Gaia Hypothesis and Earth System Self-Regulation
The Gaia hypothesis, proposed by James Lovelock (atmospheric chemist, 1919–2022) and co-developed with Lynn Margulis (microbiologist, 1938–2011), posits that Earth's biosphere, atmosphere, oceans, and geosphere interact
T_2_03 — Attachment Theory — Bowlby, Ainsworth & Social Bonds
Attachment theory, developed by John Bowlby (1958, 1969) and empirically validated by Mary Ainsworth (1978), proposes that humans are biologically predisposed to form close emotional bonds with caregivers — and that the
T_2_08 — Neuropsychology and Brain Damage
Neuropsychology studies the relationship between brain structure/function and behavior — using patterns of cognitive impairment following brain damage to infer how the intact brain organizes mental processes.
T_1_05 — Moral Psychology — Haidt, Kohlberg, Moral Foundations
Moral psychology — the empirical study of how humans make moral judgments and develop moral understanding — has undergone a revolution over the past two decades, shifting from Lawrence Kohlberg's rationalist stage theory
T_1_12 — Jung's Later Works: Synchronicity, Aion, and the Red Book
Carl Gustav Jung's later works (roughly 1944–1961) represent the most ambitious, controversial, and philosophically daring phase of his career — extending analytical psychology from clinical psychotherapy into domains of
D_2_20 — Central Asian Archaeological Sites: Merv, Afrasiab, and Ai-Khanoum
Central Asia — the vast region spanning modern Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and northern Afghanistan — was one of the most intensely urbanized and culturally productive regions of the ancient world, despite its
D_1_13 — Borobudur — The Cosmic Mountain in Stone
Borobudur, located in Central Java, Indonesia, is the world's largest Buddhist monument — a colossal mandala-shaped structure composed of approximately 2 million blocks of andesite volcanic stone, rising ~35 m above its
D_5_07 — Handbag / Knowledge Container Motif
One of the most puzzling cross-cultural motifs in ancient art: a "handbag" or bucket-shaped object appears in the hands of divine and semi-divine beings across civilizations separated by thousands of miles and thousands
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