Geography
Geography studies places, environments, people, landscapes, regions, and spatial patterns, linking physical Earth systems with human activity and mapped evidence.
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Geography studies places, environments, people, landscapes, regions, and spatial patterns, linking physical Earth systems with human activity and mapped evidence.
Architecture is the art and practice of designing buildings and spaces, balancing structure, materials, climate, culture, function, beauty, and human experience.
Religion refers to organized and lived ways people relate to the sacred, ultimate meaning, moral order, community, ritual practice, and inherited traditions.
Ethics studies moral questions about what people should do, what kind of lives are good, how duties and rights work, and how values guide choices in society.
Linguistics is the scientific study of language, examining sounds, words, grammar, meaning, social use, language change, writing, and how humans learn and process communication.
History studies the human past through evidence, interpretation, chronology, context, and debate, helping people understand change, continuity, memory, and power.
Education is the organized process of learning and teaching, helping people build knowledge, skills, values, judgment, identity, and opportunities across life.
Law is a system of rules, institutions, rights, duties, and procedures that societies use to organize authority, resolve disputes, regulate behavior, and pursue justice.
Political science studies power, government, institutions, political behavior, public policy, law, conflict, cooperation, and relations among states and societies.
Economics studies how people, firms, governments, and societies make choices under scarcity, and how those choices shape prices, jobs, income, trade, growth, and policy.
Anthropology studies humanity across time and place, connecting culture, biology, language, archaeology, evolution, and social life.
Sociology studies social life, explaining how groups, institutions, culture, inequality, identity, and social change shape human behavior and experience.
Psychology studies mind and behavior, using scientific methods to understand perception, learning, emotion, personality, social life, development, and mental health.
Neuroscience studies the nervous system, explaining how neurons, circuits, chemicals, genes, and experience shape sensation, movement, thought, behavior, and health.
Microbiology studies microscopic life and infectious agents, explaining how microbes grow, evolve, interact with hosts, shape ecosystems, and affect health.
Zoology studies animals, explaining their bodies, behavior, evolution, classification, ecological roles, and relationships with humans and other life.
Botany studies plants and plant-like life, explaining how they grow, reproduce, capture energy, interact with ecosystems, and support life on Earth.
Oceanography studies the ocean as a physical, chemical, geological, and biological system, linking seawater, seafloor, life, climate, and human activity.
Meteorology studies the atmosphere and weather, explaining how air, water vapor, heat, pressure, and motion combine to produce clouds, storms, winds, and forecasts.
Astronomy studies objects and events beyond Earth, from nearby planets and stars to galaxies, black holes, cosmic history, and the large-scale universe.
Geology studies the solid Earth, the materials that make it, the processes that reshape it, and the deep history recorded in rocks.
Ecology studies how organisms interact with each other and with their physical surroundings, from microbes in soil to forests, oceans, cities, and the global biosphere.
Genetics studies heredity and variation, explaining how DNA information is passed on, changed, expressed, and connected to traits and disease risk.
Biology studies life and living systems, from molecules and cells to organisms, ecosystems, evolution, and the shared processes that keep life going.
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