RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,717 documents 34 sections 47,686 citations 34,596+ keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

14 results for "gatekeeping"

H_2_12 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_2_12 — Peer Review: History, Flaws, and Gatekeeping Function

Peer review — the evaluation of scientific manuscripts by expert reviewers before publication — is the primary mechanism by which the scientific community certifies knowledge claims as meeting disciplinary standards of e

peer review publishing gatekeeping quality control bias anonymity
Credible

INTERDOC_26 — Forbidden Archaeology and Paradigm Gatekeeping

Thomas Kuhn (The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 1962) demonstrated that science does not progress by smooth accumulation of knowledge but through paradigm shifts: periods of "normal science" (working within accepte

forbidden archaeology paradigm shift Kuhn anomalous artifacts OOPArt academic suppression
H_2_03 Suppression & Thesis

H_2_03 — Academic Gatekeeping, Paradigm Resistance, and the Sociology of Knowledge

Academic gatekeeping — the processes by which scientific communities control which ideas, methods, and practitioners gain legitimacy — is simultaneously essential to quality (filtering out error, fraud, and pseudoscience

gatekeeping paradigm Kuhn paradigm shift peer review publish or perish
H_2_20 Credible Suppression & Thesis

H_2_20 — Suppression of Anomalous Archaeological Finds

The suppression of anomalous archaeological finds — artifacts, structures, or skeletal remains that challenge established chronological and evolutionary frameworks — is one of the most contentious claims in alternative a

suppression anomalous archaeology out-of-place artifacts academic gatekeeping Michael Cremo forbidden archaeology
H_2_17 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_2_17 — Suppressed Knowledge Evaluation Methodology

Claims of knowledge suppression pervade both fringe and mainstream intellectual discourse. This document develops an evidence-based evaluation methodology for distinguishing genuine cases of institutional suppression (Se

knowledge suppression epistemic injustice paradigm resistance Semmelweis reflex scientific gatekeeping Bayesian evaluation
M_4_01 Forbidden Archaeology

M_4_01 — Suppressed Archaeological Discoveries

The concept of "suppressed archaeology" requires careful separation of (1) genuine academic conservatism that slows acceptance of new paradigms (real and documented), (2) documented cases of destruction/loss of archaeolo

Smithsonian giant skeleton Göbekli Tepe deliberate burial Pillar 43 Younger Dryas
M_4_03 Forbidden Archaeology

M_4_03 — Archaeological Dating Disputes and Controversies

Archaeological dating methods — the techniques used to determine the age of artifacts, structures, and deposits — are the backbone of all claims about the human past. Radiocarbon dating (carbon-14 analysis, developed by

radiocarbon dating carbon-14 C-14 dendrochronology tree-ring thermoluminescence
Verified

INTERDOC_58 — The Mechanism of Suppression: Institutional Cognitive Dissonance from 4th-Century Councils to 21st-Century Peer Review

Suppression of inconvenient knowledge is not primarily about conspiracy. It is about a psychological-institutional mechanism that recurs across very different historical contexts using very different surface vocabularies

suppression mechanism institutional cognitive dissonance identity-protective cognition paradigm shift peer review gatekeeping replication crisis
H_2_19 Speculative Suppression & Thesis

H_2_19 — Forbidden Archaeology — Cremo & Thompson Claims

Forbidden Archeology: The Hidden History of the Human Race (1993, revised edition 1998, 914 pages), authored by Michael A. Cremo and Richard L. Thompson, is the most comprehensive compendium of anomalous archaeological a

Forbidden Archaeology Michael Cremo Richard Thompson human antiquity anomalous artifacts knowledge filter
H_4_17 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_4_17 — Algorithmic Censorship and AI Content Moderation

Algorithmic content moderation — the use of automated systems (machine learning classifiers, natural language processing, computer vision, and large language models) to detect, flag, restrict, or remove online content —

algorithmic censorship content moderation AI moderation platform governance shadow ban demonetization
H_4_16 Credible Suppression & Thesis

H_4_16 — Pharmaceutical Suppression of Natural Remedies

The claim that the pharmaceutical industry systematically suppresses natural and herbal remedies to protect its patent-based profit model is one of the most widespread beliefs in alternative medicine — and one that conta

pharmaceutical suppression natural remedies herbal medicine Big Pharma drug patents botanical medicine
P_2_07 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_2_07 — Ethics of Knowledge and Epistemic Justice

Epistemic justice — fairness in the production, distribution, and recognition of knowledge — has become one of the most active areas of contemporary philosophy. Miranda Fricker (Epistemic Injustice, 2007) identified two

epistemic justice epistemic injustice testimonial injustice hermeneutical injustice Fricker epistemic violence
ZE_2_10 Verified Ethics & Applied Philosophy

ZE_2_10 — Ethics of Knowledge Suppression and Epistemic Justice

The ethics of knowledge suppression and epistemic justice examines the moral dimensions of how knowledge is produced, distributed, silenced, and distorted. Miranda Fricker (Epistemic Injustice, 2007) identified two core

epistemic injustice knowledge suppression Fricker testimonial injustice hermeneutical injustice epistemic violence
Verified

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

Hinduism caste varna Manusmriti Brahmanical suppression