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.
2,695 results for "de natura deorum" — page 85 of 135
ZB_3_22 — Old-Growth Forests & Ancient Woodland Ecology
Old-growth forests — variously defined as primary forests that have developed over centuries without major anthropogenic disturbance — represent the most structurally complex and biologically diverse terrestrial ecosyste
ZB_3_21 — Soil Microbiome
The soil microbiome encompasses the entire community of microorganisms inhabiting soil — bacteria, archaea, fungi, protists, and viruses — constituting the most biodiverse ecosystem on Earth. [KEY FINDING] A single gram
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%
ZB_3_18 — Mycorrhizal Networks and Forest Ecology
Mycorrhizal networks — underground fungal networks connecting the roots of multiple plants — are among the most ecologically important symbioses on Earth, associating with ~90% of land plant species and mediating nutrien
ZB_3_16 — Lichen Biology: Symbiosis, Ecology, and Extremophile Survival
Lichens are stable symbiotic associations between a fungal partner (mycobiont, typically an ascomycete) and one or more photosynthetic partners (photobiont — green algae, usually Trebouxia, and/or cyanobacteria, usually
ZB_3_05 — Seed Banks Dormancy and Germination
Seed dormancy — the inability of a viable seed to germinate under otherwise favorable conditions — is a critical survival strategy allowing plants to persist through unfavorable periods and disperse germination across ti
ZB_3_13 — Estuary and Mangrove Ecology: Where Rivers Meet the Sea
Estuaries — semi-enclosed coastal water bodies where freshwater river discharge meets and mixes with saline ocean water — and mangrove forests — tropical and subtropical intertidal forests dominated by salt-tolerant tree
ZB_3_12 — Soil Ecology: The Living Skin of the Earth
Soil — far from inert dirt — is the most biologically diverse habitat on Earth, containing an estimated 25–30% of all species on the planet. A single gram of healthy soil harbors approximately 1 billion bacteria (from 10
ZB_3_01 — Pollination Ecology: Plant-Pollinator Coevolution and Seed Dispersal
The mutualism between flowering plants and their pollinators is one of the most consequential partnerships in the history of life. Approximately 87.5% of wild flowering plants and 75% of food crops depend on animal polli
ZC_3_09 — Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict
Nationalism — the political principle and cultural sentiment that nations should have their own states — is arguably the most powerful political force of the modern era. Benedict Anderson (Imagined Communities, 1983/1991
ZC_3_14 — Globalization: Flows, Frictions, and Fragmentation
Globalization refers to the intensification of worldwide social, economic, political, and cultural interconnections — the increasing flow of capital, goods, services, people, ideas, information, and cultural forms across
ZC_3_00 — Work Economy Politics: Subfolder Summary
ZC_3_04 — Sociology of Food and Agriculture
Sociology of food examines food as a social phenomenon — how production, distribution, preparation, and consumption are shaped by power, culture, class, gender, and global economic structures. Sidney Mintz (Sweetness and
ZC_3_11 — Warfare and Conflict — Anthropological Perspectives
The anthropology of warfare and conflict addresses one of the most consequential and contested questions in the human sciences: is organized violence a universal feature of human societies, an evolutionary inheritance, o
ZC_3_16 — The Gig Economy: Labor, Platforms, and Precarity
The gig economy — defined as a labor market characterized by short-term, task-based, platform-mediated work rather than permanent employment — has grown from a marginal phenomenon to a significant sector of advanced econ
ZC_3_12 — Colonialism and Postcolonial Theory
Colonialism — the practice of establishing political control over foreign territories, administering their peoples, and exploiting their resources for the benefit of the colonizing power — was the dominant global politic
ZC_3_23 — Commons Governance — Ostrom
Elinor Ostrom (1933–2012), professor of political science at Indiana University Bloomington, became the first woman to receive the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2009) for her groundbreaking work demonstratin
ZC_3_02 — Sociology of Science and Knowledge
Sociology of knowledge examines how social conditions shape what counts as knowledge. Karl Mannheim (Ideology and Utopia, 1929/1936) argued that thought is "existentially determined" — shaped by the thinker's social posi
ZC_3_03 — Sociology of Work and Labor
Sociology of work examines how labor is organized, experienced, and transformed by economic, technological, and social forces. Karl Marx argued that under capitalism, workers experience alienation — estrangement from the
ZC_5_12 — Peasant Studies: Agrarian Change, Moral Economy, and Resistance
Peasant studies is an interdisciplinary field studying the economic, social, political, and cultural life of rural agricultural communities — peasantries — and the processes of agrarian change, resistance, and transforma
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