RESEARCH BASE
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219 results for "adaptation rate" — page 8 of 11
ZD_3_18 — Optical Computing: Photonic Processors, All-Optical Logic & Speed-of-Light Computation
Optical computing — the use of photons instead of electrons to perform computation — has been pursued since the 1960s as a means to overcome the fundamental speed, bandwidth, and energy limitations of electronic processo
ZD_2_08 — Penrose and Computation: Non-Computability, Consciousness, and Gödel's Theorem
Roger Penrose (b. 1931), Nobel laureate in physics (2020, for demonstrating that black hole formation is a robust prediction of general relativity), has advanced an influential and controversial argument that human mathe
L_1_04 — Archaic Human Species Synthesis
The human evolutionary tree is far more complex than the older linear model suggested. Fossils, ancient DNA, and proteomics now show that Homo sapiens overlapped with several other hominin lineages, including Neanderthal
L_1_08 — Denisovans — Archaic Hominin Deep Dive
Denisovans are an extinct group of archaic hominins identified primarily through ancient DNA analysis rather than traditional fossil morphology — making them history's first hominins to be discovered by genetics. In 2010
L_1_16 — Denisovan Genetics and Legacy
The Denisovans — an extinct group of archaic humans first identified in 2010 from ancient DNA extracted from a finger bone fragment found in Denisova Cave, Altai Mountains, Siberia (~41,000 years old) — represent one of
L_4_03 — Genetic Clocks and Molecular Dating
The molecular clock — the concept that DNA and protein sequences accumulate mutations at approximately regular rates over time — provides a powerful tool for dating evolutionary divergences independently of the fossil re
L_3_11 — Genetics of Taste and Dietary Adaptation
Taste perception — the ability to detect sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami (savory) stimuli — is mediated by genetically encoded receptor proteins whose variation across individuals and populations reflects evolution
Y_4_21 — Fasting-Induced Altered States
Fasting-induced altered states of consciousness — visionary experiences, euphoria, time distortion, dissociation, and mystical-type experiences produced by prolonged food deprivation — represent one of humanity's oldest
Y_3_11 — Biofeedback and Neurofeedback
Biofeedback is the process of using real-time monitoring of physiological signals — heart rate, muscle tension, skin conductance, brainwave patterns — to train voluntary control over processes normally considered involun
Y_3_10 — Fasting, Asceticism, and Altered Consciousness
Fasting and ascetic practices — deliberate deprivation of food, sleep, comfort, or sensory input — have been used across virtually all religious and spiritual traditions to induce altered states of consciousness, visions
H_2_05 — History Rewriting and Textbook Controversies
The rewriting of history through state-controlled textbooks and curricula is one of the most persistent and globally consequential forms of knowledge suppression. This document examines four major case studies: the "Lost
H_2_14 — Funding Bias in Science: Who Pays, Who Decides, What Gets Studied
Scientific research is shaped not only by curiosity and methodology but by who funds it — and funders' priorities, interests, and incentive structures systematically influence what questions get asked, what methods are u
H_1_06 — Destruction of Pre-Islamic and Modern Cultural Heritage
The deliberate destruction of cultural heritage — from the Taliban's demolition of the Bamiyan Buddhas (2001) to ISIS's systematic obliteration of sites in Palmyra, Nimrud, Hatra, and the Mosul Museum (2014–2017) to the
H_1_07 — Nazi Cultural Theft and Book Burning
The Nazi regime conducted two parallel campaigns of cultural destruction and theft between 1933 and 1945: the public burning and censorship of books deemed "un-German" (undeutsch) beginning with the May 10, 1933 book bur
H_4_09 — Whistleblower Persecution and Institutional Retaliation
Throughout history, individuals who expose institutional wrongdoing — government illegality, corporate fraud, scientific misconduct, military atrocities — have faced severe retaliation despite acting in the public intere
H_4_00 — Modern Corporate Suppression: Subfolder Summary
P_3_06 — Plato — Forms, Cosmology, and the Philosophical Tradition
Plato (428/427–348/347 BCE) is the foundational figure of Western philosophy, whose dialogues established the frameworks for metaphysics (Theory of Forms), epistemology (knowledge as recollection), political philosophy (
P_1_17 — Artificial Intelligence and the Consciousness Question
The question of whether artificial systems can possess consciousness — genuine subjective experience, phenomenal awareness, or "something it is like" to be that system (Thomas Nagel, 1974) — has moved from philosophical
P_1_06 — Personal Identity and Continuity
Personal identity — the question of what makes you you over time, and under what conditions you would cease to exist — is one of philosophy's most ancient and practically urgent problems. The core puzzle is persistence:
P_1_01 — The Hard Problem of Consciousness
The Hard Problem of Consciousness, defined by philosopher David Chalmers in 1995, asks: Why does physical processing in the brain give rise to subjective experience? We can explain HOW neurons fire (the "easy problems")
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