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231 results for "knowledge transmission" — page 9 of 12
P_2_04 — Feminist Philosophy and Epistemology
Feminist philosophy is a diverse tradition that examines how gender — as a social, political, and conceptual category — shapes philosophical questions, knowledge production, moral reasoning, and political structures. Far
ZE_4_09 — Indigenous Rights and Intellectual Property Ethics
Indigenous rights and intellectual property ethics examines the tension between Western IP frameworks (patents, copyrights, trade secrets — designed for individual, time-limited ownership) and indigenous knowledge system
ZE_1_14 — Platonic Ethics: Justice, the Good, and the Philosopher-King
Plato (c. 428–348 BCE) stands as one of the foundational architects of Western ethical philosophy. While his metaphysical doctrines — the Theory of Forms, the immortality of the soul, the cosmology of the Timaeus — are t
ZE_1_17 — Epistemic Ethics and Intellectual Virtue
Epistemic ethics — the study of moral and ethical dimensions of knowledge, belief, and inquiry — examines our obligations as knowers: when we are responsible for what we believe, how we treat others as sources and recipi
ZE_1_03 — Feminist Philosophy and Ethics of Care
Feminist philosophy is not a single doctrine but a constellation of projects united by the conviction that mainstream Western philosophy has been shaped by patriarchal assumptions — that dominant categories, frameworks,
ZE_1_02 — Political Philosophy — Power, Justice, and the State
Political philosophy examines the fundamental questions of collective human life: What is justice? What legitimates political authority? When is revolution justified? Who should rule? From Plato's philosopher-kings throu
ZE_2_14 — Moral Inversion — How Good Becomes Evil Across Cultures
Moral inversion — the process by which entities, symbols, or practices formerly regarded as good or sacred become redefined as evil — is a recurring pattern across cultures that serves political, theological, and ideolog
N_2_02 — Sufi Orders and Islamic Esoteric Traditions
Sufism (tasawwuf) is the mystical-contemplative dimension of Islam — a tradition of inner transformation, direct divine experience, and spiritual discipline that has produced some of the world's greatest poets (Rumi, Haf
N_1_01 — Mystery Schools & Initiation Traditions
The ancient Mediterranean hosted at least six major "Mystery School" traditions, all sharing a core structure: graduated initiation, strict secrecy oaths, death-and-rebirth symbolism, and the promise of transformed consc
N_1_16 — Ancient Mystery Schools — Comparative Survey
The mystery schools (Greek: mysteria, from myein — "to close" or "to shut," referring to closed lips and closed eyes of initiates) constituted the esoteric religious tradition of the ancient Mediterranean world for over
N_1_17 — Mesopotamian & Babylonian Mystery Traditions
Mesopotamian mystery traditions represent some of the oldest documented esoteric systems in human civilization, predating the Egyptian and Greek mysteries that later drew from them. The Babylonian priesthood (the āšipu a
N_1_08 — Manichaeism and Gnostic Secret Traditions
Manichaeism and the broader Gnostic traditions represent some of history's most influential dualistic esoteric religions — systems premised on a fundamental metaphysical opposition between light/spirit and darkness/matte
N_5_01 — The Shamanic-to-Institutional Pipeline
Across every major civilization, a remarkably consistent pattern emerges: direct, experiential knowledge-traditions — shamanic practices rooted in altered states of consciousness — undergo a five-stage transformation int
N_5_03 — Underground Railroad and Coded Knowledge Systems
The Underground Railroad (c. 1780s–1865) — the clandestine network of routes, safe houses, and individuals that assisted enslaved African Americans in escaping to freedom in the northern United States, Canada, Mexico, an
R_2_12 — Tool Use in Animals: Corvids, Primates, Dolphins, and Cognitive Evolution
Tool use — the employment of an external object to alter the form, position, or condition of another object or organism — was once considered uniquely human, a defining cognitive threshold separating Homo sapiens from al
F_3_13 — Cave Art Networks — Ice Age Information Highways
Ice Age cave art — the painted, engraved, and sculpted images found in deep caves across Europe, Southeast Asia, and elsewhere, dating from the Upper Paleolithic (~45,000–10,000 BP) — is the oldest known evidence of comp
F_3_09 — Musical Instrument Diffusion and Shared Traditions
Musical instruments represent some of the oldest artifacts of human culture and their distribution patterns across the globe illuminate deep connections — and sometimes startling independent inventions — among widely sep
F_3_08 — Ancient Communication and Postal Systems
Long before electronic communication, ancient civilizations developed sophisticated communication and postal systems that enabled information to travel across vast empires at speeds that would not be surpassed until the
I_2_02 — Government Investigation of Anomalous Phenomena
For nearly eight decades, the United States government — along with allies and adversaries — has maintained a sprawling, often covert apparatus for investigating anomalous phenomena spanning unidentified aerial/aerospace
I_4_08 — The Wilson-Davis Memo and Crash Retrieval Programs
The Wilson-Davis Memo (also called the "Wilson Notes" or "Wilson-Davis Notes") refers to a set of notes allegedly taken by physicist Dr. Eric W. Davis documenting a meeting on October 16, 2002, with Vice Admiral Thomas R
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