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 90 of 135
T_4_09 — Psychology of Power and Authority
The psychology of power and authority examines how social hierarchy, dominance, obedience, and institutional authority shape human behavior. Two landmark experiments defined the field: Stanley Milgram's obedience studies
T_4_06 — Cross-Cultural Psychology
Cross-cultural psychology investigates how culture shapes human thought, emotion, and behavior — and which psychological processes are universal versus culturally specific. The field distinguishes between etic approaches
T_4_21 — Mass Formation Psychology
Mass formation describes a psychological phenomenon in which large populations become fixated on a single narrative, willing to sacrifice individual freedom and rational judgment for the perceived security of collective
T_4_03 — Group Psychology and Crowd Behavior
Group psychology examines how individuals' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by the presence and actions of others — from small groups to mass crowds. Foundational research includes Gustave Le Bon's The Cr
T_4_19 — Forensic Psychology: Profiling, Eyewitness Testimony & False Confessions
Forensic psychology — the application of psychological science to legal questions — has fundamentally transformed the criminal justice system while exposing critical vulnerabilities in traditional investigative and judic
T_4_14 — Social Comparison Theory: Festinger, Upward/Downward Comparison, and Social Media
Social comparison theory, introduced by Leon Festinger (1954), proposes that humans have a fundamental drive to evaluate their abilities and opinions — and in the absence of objective, non-social standards, they do so by
T_4_18 — Forensic Psychology: Criminal Behavior, Assessment, and Justice
Forensic psychology — the application of psychological science to legal and criminal justice systems — encompasses criminal profiling, eyewitness testimony reliability, risk assessment of violence and recidivism, compete
T_4_01 — Psychology of Belief & Conspiracy Thinking
The psychology of conspiracy thinking examines why individuals adopt beliefs in secret plots by powerful actors to achieve malevolent goals — beliefs that often resist disconfirmation and form interconnected "monological
T_4_10 — Conformity and Obedience: Asch, Milgram, and the Social Psychology of Compliance
The study of conformity (adjusting one's behavior or beliefs to match a group) and obedience (following directives from an authority figure) produced some of the most famous — and disturbing — experiments in the history
T_4_15 — The Psychology of Cooperation and Trust: Game Theory, Reciprocity, and Institutions
Cooperation — acting in ways that benefit others at a cost to oneself — is both theoretically puzzling (why would natural selection favor organisms that sacrifice fitness for others?) and practically essential (every hum
T_2_03 — Attachment Theory — Bowlby, Ainsworth & Social Bonds
Attachment theory, developed by John Bowlby (1958, 1969) and empirically validated by Mary Ainsworth (1978), proposes that humans are biologically predisposed to form close emotional bonds with caregivers — and that the
T_2_07 — Psychology of Addiction
Addiction — compulsive engagement with a substance or behavior despite harmful consequences — is now understood as a chronic brain disorder involving neuroplastic changes in reward, motivation, memory, and executive cont
T_2_06 — Health Psychology and Stress
Health psychology investigates how psychological, behavioral, and social factors influence health, illness, and healthcare — integrating biological and psychosocial perspectives within the biopsychosocial model (Engel, 1
T_2_10 — Psychology of Resilience and Post-Traumatic Growth
The dominant narrative — that trauma inevitably causes lasting psychological damage — is contradicted by extensive research. Resilience — the ability to maintain or quickly recover stable psychological functioning after
T_2_04 — Positive Psychology & Wellbeing Science
Positive psychology — the scientific study of what makes life worth living — was formally launched by Martin Seligman in his 1998 APA presidential address, shifting psychology's traditional focus from pathology and dysfu
T_2_00 — Clinical Health: Subfolder Summary
T_2_22 — Psychopathy Neuroscience
Psychopathy is a personality disorder characterized by persistent antisocial behavior, impaired empathy and remorse, bold and disinhibited traits, and often superficial charm — affecting an estimated 1% of the general po
T_2_12 — Psychology of Trauma and PTSD
Psychological trauma — exposure to events involving actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence — can produce lasting alterations in cognition, emotion, arousal, and behavior. Post-Traumatic Stress Dis
T_2_13 — Placebo and Nocebo Effects
The placebo effect — a measurable physiological or psychological improvement in response to an inert treatment — is one of the most robust and well-documented phenomena in medicine and psychology, while the nocebo effect
T_2_05 — Clinical Psychology: History and Foundations
Clinical psychology — the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of mental disorders — evolved from ancient supernatural explanations of madness through institutional reform, the psychoanalytic revolution, behavioral and c
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