RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
296 results for "guide RNA" — page 9 of 15
Q_3_07 — Plasma Cosmology and the Electric Universe Hypothesis
Plasma cosmology and its populist extension, the Electric Universe (EU) hypothesis, propose that electromagnetic forces — rather than gravity — are the dominant organizing force in the cosmos, and that plasma (ionized ga
INTERDOC_48 — Hindu Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline of Knowledge Control By and Against Hindu Traditions
Hindu suppression operates across three categories: (1) Suppression BY Hindu institutions — the Brahmanical caste/varna system as formalized in the Manusmriti (~200 BCE–200 CE), which prescribed that a Shudra who "listen
ZB_2_16 — Tardigrades: Biology of Indestructibility
Tardigrades (phylum Tardigrada, ~1,400 described species) — commonly called "water bears" or "moss piglets" — are microscopic invertebrates (0.1–1.5 mm) renowned for their extraordinary tolerance to environmental extreme
ZB_2_20 — Human Microbiome & Dysbiosis
The human microbiome — the collective genome of the ~38 trillion microorganisms (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses) inhabiting the human body — represents a second genome interacting with host physiology in ways that are
ZB_2_23 — Cephalopod Intelligence and Distributed Cognition
Cephalopods — octopuses, cuttlefish, squid, and nautiluses — represent one of evolution's most extraordinary experiments in intelligence, having diverged from the vertebrate lineage approximately 530 million years ago ye
ZB_1_13 — Sexual Selection and Mate Choice
Sexual selection — first articulated by Darwin (1871) in The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex — is the evolutionary process by which traits that increase mating success are favored, even when they decreas
ZB_1_08 — Cephalopod Intelligence and Cognition
Cephalopods — octopuses, squid, cuttlefish, and nautiluses — represent the pinnacle of invertebrate cognitive evolution, having independently evolved complex brains and sophisticated behaviors along a lineage that diverg
ZB_5_13 — Ecological Economics: Valuing Nature's Services
Ecological economics is a transdisciplinary field that treats the human economy as a subsystem embedded within — and fundamentally dependent upon — the finite biophysical systems of the Earth, challenging the neoclassica
ZB_5_01 — Biological Rhythms Beyond Circadian
While circadian (~24-hour) rhythms are the best-studied biological oscillations (2017 Nobel Prize to Hall, Rosbash, Young), life is permeated by rhythms operating across all timescales — from millisecond neural oscillati
ZB_5_03 — Microbiome Ecology
The microbiome — the collective genomes of the trillions of microorganisms (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses) inhabiting a host organism or environment — has emerged as one of the most transformative research areas in 2
ZC_3_18 — Surveillance Capitalism and the Digital Economy
Surveillance capitalism — a term coined by Shoshana Zuboff (Harvard Business School, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, 2019) — describes an economic system in which human experience is unilaterally claimed as free raw
ZC_3_13 — Human Rights: Universal Norms and Their Contested Foundations
Human rights — entitlements and protections considered inherent to all human beings regardless of nationality, ethnicity, sex, language, religion, or other status — constitute one of the most influential normative framew
ZC_1_07 — Behavioral Economics — Nudge Theory & Decision-Making
Behavioral economics integrates psychological insights into economic models of human decision-making, challenging the neoclassical assumption of perfectly rational "Homo economicus" and documenting systematic deviations
ZC_1_11 — Psychology of Time
The psychology of time encompasses how humans perceive duration, orient themselves across past-present-future, and how temporal cognition influences decision-making, memory, motivation, and well-being.
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_4_20 — Thermodynamics and Ancient Energy Systems
Thermodynamics — the physics of heat, energy, work, and entropy — provides a powerful framework for understanding the energy systems underlying ancient civilizations: how societies captured, converted, stored, and utiliz
G_4_13 — HADD and Agency Detection — Why We See Beings Everywhere
The Hyperactive Agency Detection Device (HADD) — a term coined by cognitive scientist Justin Barrett (2000) building on work by Stewart Guthrie (1993) and Pascal Boyer (2001) — refers to the proposed cognitive mechanism
G_4_04 — Cognitive Science of Religion and the Anthropology of Belief
The Cognitive Science of Religion (CSR) is an interdisciplinary field that explains religious belief and practice as natural products of evolved cognitive mechanisms rather than supernatural revelation or cultural invent
G_4_08 — Graham Hancock — Data-Driven Evaluation of Claims
Graham Hancock (b. 1950, Edinburgh) is a British journalist and author who has become the most prominent advocate of the "lost civilization" hypothesis — the idea that an advanced civilization existed before the end of t
G_4_17 — Microbiome Archaeology — Ancient Gut and Soil Microbes
Microbiome archaeology — the extraction and analysis of ancient microbial communities from archaeological materials (dental calculus, coprolites, mummified remains, soil sediments, ceramics) — has emerged since ~2012 as
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