RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
RECENTLY ADDED — newest documents in the corpus
TOA_Transparency — Research Methodology & Verification Overview
Theories of Anything is a 3,627-document multi-disciplinary research knowledge base built through a human–AI partnership (Gortiva and Cairn, a Claude-based model from Anthropic). Every document follows an identical templ
TH_05 — The Water-Carbon-Chirality Triple Lock
No summary available.
TH_04 — The Suppression Convergence Pattern
No summary available.
TH_03 — The Fibonacci Inevitability Principle
No summary available.
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS — synthesis docs, deep connections & methodology
How We Work
Our research methodology, fact-checking systems, quality scores, AI partnership — and the honest questions you’re probably already asking about this project.
66 Cross-Corpus Syntheses
Patterns that only emerge when all 34 sections are connected. 8 thematic clusters tracing threads across ancient knowledge, consciousness, genetics, cosmology, and physics.
Cross-Document Connections
Tracked relationships between specific claims across sections — the threads that make this a web of understanding rather than a collection of isolated facts.
Working Hypotheses
Synthesis threads under active investigation — held to the same evidence standards but acknowledged as unfinished. These are open questions, not conclusions.
H — Suppression & Thesis · 95 documents
H_0_00 — Suppression & Thesis: Section Summary
H_1_00 — Historical Knowledge Destruction: Subfolder Summary
H_1_01 — Suppression of Ancient Knowledge
This document catalogs the systematic destruction of ancient knowledge, artifacts, texts, and entire religions throughout history — framed both as deliberate suppression of heterodox knowledge (Claude/Gemini/Master persp
H_1_02 — Burning of Maya Codices and Mesoamerican Knowledge Destruction
The systematic destruction of Maya manuscripts represents one of history's most devastating losses of accumulated knowledge. Bishop Diego de Landa's 1562 auto-da-fé at Maní destroyed thousands of Maya texts, leaving only
H_1_03 — The Inquisition and Systematic Knowledge Suppression
The Inquisition—spanning the Medieval (1184), Spanish (1478–1834),
H_1_04 — Ancient Libraries — Destruction and Knowledge Loss
Throughout human history, major repositories of knowledge have been destroyed by fire, war, religious persecution, conquest, and deliberate suppression — resulting in incalculable losses to the accumulated learning of an
H_1_05 — Qin Shi Huang Book Burning and Burying of Scholars (213–212 BCE)
In 213 BCE, Qin Shi Huang — China's first emperor — ordered the burning of books (fenshu 焚書) that contradicted Legalist state ideology, and in 212 BCE reportedly buried alive 460 Confucian scholars (kengru 坑儒) who defied
H_1_06 — Destruction of Pre-Islamic and Modern Cultural Heritage
The deliberate destruction of cultural heritage — from the Taliban's demolition of the Bamiyan Buddhas (2001) to ISIS's systematic obliteration of sites in Palmyra, Nimrud, Hatra, and the Mosul Museum (2014–2017) to the
H_1_07 — Nazi Cultural Theft and Book Burning
The Nazi regime conducted two parallel campaigns of cultural destruction and theft between 1933 and 1945: the public burning and censorship of books deemed "un-German" (undeutsch) beginning with the May 10, 1933 book bur
H_1_08 — Destruction of Nalanda and Asian Knowledge Centers
The destruction of Nalanda — the world's first residential university, operating continuously for approximately 700 years (5th–12th centuries CE) in what is now Bihar, India — represents one of the most consequential epi
H_1_09 — Translation Losses and Textual Transmission Chains
Before the printing press (1440s CE), all knowledge transmission depended on manual copying (scribal reproduction of manuscripts) and oral tradition — both inherently lossy processes. Every manuscript copy introduced pot
H_1_10 — Damnatio Memoriae and State-Directed Historical Erasure
Damnatio memoriae ("condemnation of memory") — the deliberate, systematic erasure of an individual, event, or idea from the historical record by a governing authority — is one of the oldest and most persistent forms of i
H_1_11 — Chinese Cultural Revolution — Destruction of the Four Olds
The Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) unleashed one of history's most devastating campaigns of deliberate cultural destruction. Launched by Mao Zedong to reassert ideological control and purge perceived enemies, th
H_1_12 — Iconoclasm — Systematic Destruction of Sacred Images
Iconoclasm — the deliberate destruction of religious images, statues, and sacred art — is one of the most recurrent and cross-cultural forms of knowledge suppression in human history. Far from random vandalism, iconoclas
H_1_13 — Knowledge Loss in the Fall of Rome and Early Middle Ages
The collapse of the Western Roman Empire (conventionally dated to 476 CE, though the decline was a process spanning the 3rd–6th centuries) produced one of the most dramatic and well-documented episodes of knowledge and t
H_1_14 — Religious Text Sanitization: The Erasure and Editing of Sacred Traditions
Religious text sanitization — the deliberate editing, exclusion, suppression, or reinterpretation of sacred texts by institutional authorities to enforce doctrinal orthodoxy, eliminate heterodox teachings, or adapt tradi
H_1_15 — Religious Text Sanitization: Canon Formation & Apocrypha Politics
The formation of religious canons — deciding which texts are authoritative and which are excluded — represents one of history's most consequential acts of knowledge control. The Christian biblical canon evolved over cent
H_1_16 — UFO Crash Retrieval Testimony Catalog
The history of alleged UFO crash retrieval operations — in which governments or military agencies are claimed to have recovered physical wreckage and, in some accounts, occupants from downed unidentified aerial phenomena
H_1_17 — COINTELPRO — FBI Domestic Surveillance
COINTELPRO (an acronym for COunter INTELligence PROgram) was a series of covert and illegal projects conducted by the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from 1956 to 1971, aimed at surveilling, infiltrat
H_1_18 — Library of Alexandria: Destruction and the Knowledge-Loss Question
The Library of Alexandria was the most ambitious knowledge-collection project of antiquity, founded under Ptolemy I Soter (~290s BCE) and developed by Ptolemy II Philadelphus as part of the Mouseion — a state-funded rese
H_2_00 — Institutional Academic Suppression: Subfolder Summary
H_2_01 — Key Findings and Reliability Assessment
This is the capstone analysis document for the entire research project. It provides the quantitative and qualitative answer to the core question: Is the evidence overwhelmingly positive regarding ancient serpent beings a
H_2_02 — Future Research Topics
This document consolidates ALL proposed future research topics from all eight source files: Claude (Doc 12), Gemini (Doc 12), GPT5.2 (Doc 12 & Doc 25), Master (Doc 12 & Doc 25), Raptor (Doc 25 addendum), and working note
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
H_2_04 — Scientific Censorship and Paradigm Defense
The history of science includes well-documented instances where
H_2_05 — History Rewriting and Textbook Controversies
The rewriting of history through state-controlled textbooks and curricula is one of the most persistent and globally consequential forms of knowledge suppression. This document examines four major case studies: the "Lost
H_2_06 — Successful Paradigm Shifts in Archaeology: Cases Where Orthodoxy Was Wrong
The history of science contains well-documented cases where firmly held orthodoxies were overturned by new evidence, often after decades of resistance from established authorities. Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientif
H_2_07 — Radiocarbon Dating Controversies and Calibration Disputes
Radiocarbon dating — the measurement of the radioactive isotope ¹⁴C in organic materials to determine their age — is archaeology's single most important chronological tool, having revolutionized the discipline since Will
H_2_08 — Textbook Bias and National History Narratives
History textbooks are among the most powerful instruments of national identity formation — and among the most systematically distorted sources of historical knowledge in any society. Every nation's textbooks tell a selec
H_2_09 — The Galileo Affair — Science, Religion, and Power
The Galileo affair — the Roman Inquisition's condemnation of Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) for defending the Copernican heliocentric model — is the archetypal case of religious authority suppressing scientific knowledge, i
H_2_10 — Archaeological Nationalism: Weaponizing the Past
Archaeological nationalism is the systematic appropriation of archaeological evidence, historical narratives, and cultural heritage to serve nationalist political agendas — constructing, validating, or legitimizing claim
H_2_11 — Scientific Revolutions: Kuhn, Paradigm Shifts, and Resistance
Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) fundamentally altered understanding of how science changes by arguing that scientific progress is not a smooth, cumulative accumulation of knowledge but rather
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
H_2_13 — Reproducibility in Archaeology: Method Reliability Assessment
Reproducibility — the ability of independent researchers to produce the same results using the same methods on the same or equivalent materials — is a cornerstone of scientific credibility. Yet archaeology faces unique c
H_2_14 — Funding Bias in Science: Who Pays, Who Decides, What Gets Studied
Scientific research is shaped not only by curiosity and methodology but by who funds it — and funders' priorities, interests, and incentive structures systematically influence what questions get asked, what methods are u
H_2_15 — Re-Dating Controversies: Sites Older Than Thought
The history of archaeology and prehistory is punctuated by re-dating controversies — cases where new evidence or improved dating technology revealed that sites, artifacts, or traditions were significantly older than prev
H_2_16 — Dissident Scientists: Careers Destroyed by Heterodox Views
The history of science includes numerous cases of researchers whose careers were damaged, marginalized, or destroyed because they advanced ideas that contradicted the prevailing scientific paradigm — ideas that were, in
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
H_2_18 — Cold War Scientific Espionage and Suppressed Research
The Cold War (1947–1991) created an unprecedented regime of scientific secrecy in which entire fields of research — nuclear physics, rocketry, biological weapons, cryptography, remote sensing, and materials science — wer
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
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
H_3_00 — Cultural Indigenous Suppression: Subfolder Summary
H_3_01 — Indigenous Knowledge Suppression — Colonialism and Epistemicide
Epistemicide — the systematic destruction of rival knowledge systems — is arguably the most devastating and least acknowledged consequence of global colonialism. Between 1492 and 1950, European colonial powers destroyed,
H_3_02 — Suppression of Gnostic and Heterodox Christianity
From the earliest centuries of Christianity through the medieval period, a sustained campaign of suppression eliminated dozens of alternative Christian movements, destroying their texts and persecuting their adherents. B
H_3_03 — Witch Trials as Knowledge Suppression — Europe and the Americas
The European witch trials (c. 1450-1750) and their American extensions resulted in an estimated 40,000-100,000 executions, with approximately 75-80% of the accused being women. While the primary drivers were religious, s
H_3_04 — Destruction of Aboriginal Australian Knowledge Systems
The destruction of Aboriginal Australian knowledge systems represents the disruption of the longest continuous cultural tradition on Earth — spanning at least 65,000 years. From the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788, co
H_3_05 — Colonial Looting, Museum Ethics, and Repatriation
The relationship between archaeology, empire, and cultural patrimony
H_3_06 — Linguistic Extinction and Lost Knowledge Systems
Of the approximately 7,000 languages spoken today, linguists estimate
H_3_07 — Suppression of Women's Knowledge and Healing Traditions
Across European and colonial history, women's roles as healers, herbalists, midwives, and knowledge transmitters were systematically marginalized through a combination of religious persecution, medical professionalizatio
H_3_08 — Ethnobotanical Knowledge Loss and Biocultural Extinction
An estimated 80% of the world's population relies at least partially on traditional plant-based medicine (WHO estimate), and approximately 25% of modern pharmaceutical drugs are derived from or inspired by compounds firs
H_3_09 — Suppression of Matriarchal Evidence and Goddess Cultures
The question of whether matriarchal or goddess-centered societies existed in prehistory — and whether evidence for them has been systematically suppressed or marginalized — is one of the most contentious intersections of
H_3_10 — Museum Ethics — Who Owns the Past?
The question of who owns the past — and specifically, who has rightful custody of archaeological objects, cultural artifacts, and human remains — is the central ethical controversy in contemporary museum practice. The de
H_3_11 — Provenance Research: Authentication, Repatriation, and Evidence Chains
Provenance research — the systematic investigation and documentation of an object's ownership history, findspot, chain of custody, and authentication — is the foundational discipline that determines whether an artifact i
H_3_12 — Museum Decontextualization: How Display Distorts Meaning
When an archaeological artifact is removed from its findspot — the soil layer, building, grave, or landscape in which it was deposited — and placed in a museum vitrine, it undergoes a fundamental transformation of meanin
H_3_13 — Colonial Epistemology: Western Science Dismissing Indigenous Knowledge
Colonial epistemology refers to the system of knowledge production and validation that emerged alongside European colonial expansion (15th-20th centuries) and continues to shape global academic practice — a system in whi
H_3_14 — Oral History Suppression: Favoring Text Over Voice
Academic historiography has systematically privileged written texts over oral sources — treating written documents as reliable evidence and oral traditions as unreliable, distorted, or "merely" mythological. This literac
H_3_15 — Gender Bias in Archaeology: Androcentrism and Its Corrections
For most of its history, archaeology has been shaped by androcentric assumptions — the projection of modern Western gender norms onto past societies. The "Man the Hunter" paradigm (formalized at a 1966 symposium but impl
H_3_16 — The Classics Canon: What Was Selected, What Was Lost
Of the vast literary output of the ancient Greek and Roman world — estimated at tens of thousands of texts — only a tiny fraction survives. The ancient classics canon as we know it is not a representative sample of ancie
H_3_17 — Linguistic Genocide: Language Suppression as Cultural Erasure
Linguistic genocide — the systematic, deliberate destruction of a people's language as a means of cultural erasure — has been a consistent tool of colonial and authoritarian regimes worldwide. Distinguished from natural
H_3_18 — Digital Information Control and Algorithmic Censorship
The shift from print and broadcast media to digital platforms (c. 2000–present) has created new mechanisms of information control that differ fundamentally from historical censorship. Unlike state censorship, which remov
H_3_19 — Indigenous Knowledge Destruction: Colonial Erasure & Residential Schools
The destruction of indigenous knowledge systems represents one of history's most comprehensive and deliberate episodes of cultural erasure, spanning from the Spanish burning of Maya codices in the 16th century to the res
H_3_20 — Free Energy Suppression Claims
The claim that technologies capable of extracting "free energy" — commonly defined as usable energy extracted at no fuel cost from the quantum vacuum, ambient electromagnetic fields, or undiscovered physical mechanisms —
H_4_00 — Modern Corporate Suppression: Subfolder Summary
H_4_01 — Propaganda, Information Control, and the Manufacture of Consent
The systematic manipulation of public belief is as old as civilization itself. Egyptian pharaohs chiseled out predecessors' names (damnatio memoriae), Roman emperors staged bread and circuses, and Chinese imperial histor
H_4_02 — Two Factions Dynamic
Across virtually every ancient civilization, a recurring narrative describes TWO factions among non-human or divine beings: one that wants humanity to have knowledge, power, and expanded consciousness — and one that want
H_4_03 — Demonization Timeline
This document traces the single most important transformation in the history of mythology: the 2,500-year process by which the serpent/dragon went from the most POSITIVE universal symbol to the most NEGATIVE. Before appr
H_4_04 — Soviet Science Suppression — Lysenkoism and Vavilov
The Lysenko affair (1928–1964) represents the most devastating case of ideological suppression of science in the 20th century. Trofim Denisovich Lysenko (1898–1976), an agronomist with minimal formal training, rose to do
H_4_05 — Digital Age Censorship and Algorithm Suppression
The digital age has introduced unprecedented mechanisms for information suppression, censorship, and narrative control that operate at global scale and often remain invisible to those affected. This document examines thr
H_4_06 — Suppression of Psychedelic Research (1960s–2000s)
From the late 1940s through the mid-1960s, psychedelic substances — particularly LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) and psilocybin — were the subject of extensive legitimate scientific research, with over 1,000 peer-review
H_4_07 — History of Archaeology: From Antiquarianism to Modern Science
Archaeology as a discipline evolved from Renaissance-era antiquarian curiosity through Enlightenment collecting into a rigorous, methodologically grounded science. Key turning points include Thomsen's Three-Age System (1
H_4_08 — Archaeological Forgery and Fraud: Piltdown, Kensington, and How Science Self-Corrects
Archaeological forgeries and frauds have periodically disrupted the discipline, but their exposure demonstrates science's capacity for self-correction. The Piltdown Man hoax (1912–1953) misled paleoanthropology for four
H_4_09 — Whistleblower Persecution and Institutional Retaliation
Throughout history, individuals who expose institutional wrongdoing — government illegality, corporate fraud, scientific misconduct, military atrocities — have faced severe retaliation despite acting in the public intere
H_4_10 — Corporate Suppression of Science
One of the most systematic and consequential forms of knowledge suppression in the modern era is the deliberate corporate manufacture of scientific doubt to protect profitable but harmful products. The strategy was pione
H_4_11 — Classified Science and Declassified Programs
Governments routinely classify scientific and technical research on national security grounds, creating vast bodies of knowledge that are inaccessible to the public, the scientific community, and democratic oversight for
H_4_12 — Patent Suppression and Buried Technology
Patent suppression — the deliberate withholding, blocking, or acquisition-and-shelving of inventions through legal, corporate, or governmental mechanisms — is a documented phenomenon with both verified and mythologized d
H_4_13 — Tobacco Science — How Industries Manufactured Doubt
The tobacco industry's half-century campaign to deny the health effects of smoking (c. 1953–2006) is the most thoroughly documented case of corporate science manipulation in history — and the template from which virtuall
H_4_14 — The Smithsonian Controversy — Giant Claims and Institutional Response
The claim that the Smithsonian Institution has systematically suppressed evidence of giant human skeletons — allegedly found in 19th-century mound excavations across the American Midwest and East — is one of the most per
H_4_15 — Classification and Declassification — How Governments Control Knowledge
The classification system — the legal and bureaucratic apparatus by which governments designate information as secret and restrict its dissemination — is one of the most powerful mechanisms of knowledge control in the mo
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
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 —
H_4_18 — Forbidden History: How Civilizations Erase Predecessors
A recurring pattern across human history is the systematic erasure, suppression, or appropriation of predecessor cultures by their successors — a phenomenon that operates through multiple mechanisms: physical destruction
H_4_19 — Translation Bias: How Translators Shape Ancient Meaning
Translation — the rendering of texts from one language into another — is never a neutral, transparent process. Every translation involves choices about how to handle ambiguity, cultural concepts with no direct equivalent
H_4_20 — Cargo Cult Science Extended: Feynman, Pseudoscience Boundaries
"Cargo cult science" — a term coined by Richard Feynman in his 1974 Caltech commencement address — describes research that mimics the surface appearance of science (data collection, statistical analysis, academic publica
H_4_21 — Censorship of Ancient Art: What We Weren't Shown
The censorship of ancient art that depicts sexuality, nudity, sacred eroticism, violence, bodily functions, or other content considered offensive or inappropriate by later sensibilities represents a significant and well-
H_4_22 — Climate Science Denial: Manufactured Doubt Case Study
Climate science denial — the organized effort to cast doubt on the scientific consensus that human activity is driving dangerous global warming — represents one of the best-documented cases of manufactured doubt in moder
H_4_23 — State Secrets and Archaeological Blackouts: Restricted Sites
Across the world, archaeological sites, historical monuments, and culturally significant locations are partially or wholly restricted from scholarly access and public knowledge due to military occupation, government secr
H_4_24 — Lost Technologies: Things Ancients Could Do That We Can't Replicate
Throughout history, civilizations developed technologies, materials, and techniques that were subsequently lost — and that modern science has struggled or failed to fully replicate. These "lost technologies" range from m
H_4_25 — Information Warfare and Historical Revisionism: Modern Threats
Information warfare — the strategic use of information (and misinformation) to achieve political, military, or economic objectives — has entered a new and qualitatively different phase in the digital era. While propagand
H_4_26 — Intellectual Property and Biopiracy: Patenting Traditional Knowledge
Biopiracy — the appropriation of traditional knowledge, biological resources, and genetic materials from indigenous and local communities by corporations, researchers, or governments, typically without adequate consent,
H_4_27 — Open Access and Democratization of Knowledge: Breaking the Paywalls
The modern academic publishing system creates a paradox: publicly funded research — produced by researchers paid by taxpayers, conducted in publicly funded institutions, peer-reviewed by unpaid volunteer referees — is ov
H_4_28 — Corporate Knowledge Suppression: Industry Strategies for Concealing Scientific Evidence
Corporate knowledge suppression — the deliberate concealment, distortion, or delayed disclosure of scientific findings by private industry to protect commercial interests — represents one of the most consequential forms
H_4_29 — Food Industry Science Suppression
The systematic influence of the food industry on nutrition science, dietary guidelines, and public health policy represents one of the most extensively documented cases of corporate science suppression in the modern era
H_4_30 — Fluoridation Controversy — Science & Politics
Community water fluoridation (CWF) — the deliberate addition of fluoride compounds (typically sodium fluorosilicate or fluorosilicic acid) to public water supplies at concentrations of 0.7 mg/L (the U.S. standard since 2
H_4_31 — Media Ownership Concentration & Information Control
The progressive consolidation of media ownership in the United States and globally since the 1980s — from approximately 50 companies controlling the majority of American media in 1983 to effectively 6 major conglomerates
H_4_32 — Information Warfare, Propaganda & Manufactured Consent
Information warfare — the deliberate use of information and communication systems to gain strategic advantage — is as old as organized conflict, but the modern era has industrialized it. From Edward Bernays's founding of
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields