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.
2,040 results for "Campaign to Stop Killer Robots" — page 83 of 102
R_2_06 — Isbell Snake Detection Hypothesis
This document examines Isbell Snake Detection Hypothesis, a topic within the Biology Evolution research area. Key areas of investigation include Origin and Author, The Core Thesis, The Expanded Pulvinar. The analysis spa
R_2_11 — Convergent Evolution: Parallel Solutions Across Lineages
Convergent evolution — the independent origin of similar features in unrelated lineages — is one of the most striking patterns in the history of life, suggesting that natural selection repeatedly discovers the same "solu
R_2_08 — Bipedalism — Why We Walk Upright and What It Cost Us
Bipedalism — habitual upright walking on two legs — is the defining characteristic of the hominin lineage, predating brain enlargement, tool use, and language by millions of years. The earliest evidence comes from Sahela
R_2_09 — Self-Domestication Hypothesis — Did Humans Tame Themselves?
The human self-domestication hypothesis proposes that Homo sapiens underwent a domestication process analogous to that of dogs, livestock, and Belyaev's experimentally domesticated foxes — but without an external domesti
R_1_10 — RNA World Hypothesis: The Origin of Life and Self-Replicating RNA
The RNA World hypothesis proposes that early life was based on RNA molecules that served as both genetic material and catalysts — before the emergence of DNA and proteins. This idea, named by Walter Gilbert in 1986, rest
R_1_01 — Abiogenesis & Origin of Life Theories
Abiogenesis — the emergence of life from non-living chemistry — remains one of the deepest unsolved problems in science. The oldest confirmed microfossils date to ~3.5 billion years ago (Pilbara, Western Australia), with
R_1_05 — Quantum Biology
Until recently, quantum effects were thought impossible in warm, wet biological systems. The standard assumption held that thermal noise at physiological temperatures (~310 K) would destroy quantum coherence within femto
R_1_06 — Symbiogenesis — Lynn Margulis and Cooperative Evolution
Symbiogenesis — the evolutionary origin of new organisms, organelles, or metabolic capabilities through the permanent merger of previously independent life forms — is one of the most consequential biological discoveries
R_1_15 — The Chirality Problem: Why Life Uses Left-Handed Amino Acids
One of the deepest unsolved problems in the origin of life is homochirality — the fact that all known life on Earth uses almost exclusively L-amino acids (left-handed) for proteins and D-sugars (right-handed) for nucleic
R_1_19 — Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vent Origin of Life
The deep-sea hydrothermal vent hypothesis for the origin of life proposes that life on Earth began at submarine hydrothermal systems — either high-temperature black smoker vents (>350°C, acidic, rich in transition metals
R_1_14 — Biofilms: Microbial Communities, Quorum Sensing, and Cooperation
Biofilms are structured communities of microorganisms — bacteria, archaea, fungi, and algae — attached to surfaces and embedded in a self-produced matrix of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS): polysaccharides, prot
R_1_09 — The Great Oxidation Event: Oxygen, Cyanobacteria, and Earth's Atmospheric Transformation
The Great Oxidation Event (GOE), occurring approximately 2.4–2.1 billion years ago during the Paleoproterozoic, was the most dramatic chemical transformation in Earth's history — atmospheric oxygen rose from trace levels
S_4_05 — Asteroid Deflection and Planetary Defense
Asteroid and comet impacts represent the only existential risk with a proven extinction track record — the Chicxulub impact 66 million years ago ended the Cretaceous and eliminated ~75% of species including non-avian din
S_4_03 — Nuclear War and Civilizational Risk
Nuclear war remains one of the most acute existential threats to human civilization, with approximately 12,500 warheads in global arsenals as of 2024 and the Doomsday Clock at a historic 90 seconds to midnight. Peer-revi
S_4_08 — Hypersonic and Next-Generation Transport
Next-generation transport encompasses technologies aimed at dramatically increasing speed, efficiency, or both. Supersonic flight (Mach 1–5): the Concorde (1976–2003) proved commercial supersonic travel technically feasi
S_4_01 — Existential Risk Taxonomy
Existential risk (x-risk) refers to any event that could permanently curtail humanity's long-term potential — including extinction, civilizational collapse without recovery, or irreversible loss of value (e.g., permanent
S_4_04 — Pandemic Risk — Ancient Plagues, Antibiotic Resistance, and Biosecurity
Pandemics have repeatedly reshaped human civilization, from the Plague of Justinian (541 CE, ~25-50 million dead, Yersinia pestis confirmed via ancient DNA) to the Black Death (1347-1353, killing 30-60% of Europe's popul
S_4_09 — Drone Technology and Unmanned Systems
Drone technology (unmanned aerial vehicles — UAVs/UAS) has evolved from exclusively military systems to pervasive civilian, commercial, and consumer tools. Military origins: the US Predator (first flight 1994) and Reaper
S_1_05 — Digital Archaeology — AI, LiDAR, Remote Sensing, and the Discovery Revolution
Digital technologies are revolutionizing archaeology at a pace unprecedented in the discipline's history. LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) surveys have revealed entire hidden urban landscapes beneath forest canopy — f
S_1_19 — Neuromorphic Computing
Neuromorphic computing — the design of hardware and software systems inspired by the architecture and dynamics of biological neural networks — seeks to overcome the limitations of traditional von Neumann computing (seque
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