RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
111 results for "creation" — page 1 of 6
A_1_09 — Tiamat — Primordial Chaos Dragon and Cosmic Creation
Tiamat (Akkadian: ti'āmat or tâmtu, "sea") is the primordial chaos deity in the Enuma Elish — the Babylonian creation epic (composed ~1100 BCE, though drawing on older traditions). Tiamat represents the primordial salt w
A_1_07 — Enuma Elish — The Babylonian Creation Epic
The Enuma Elish ("When on high…") is the Babylonian creation epic — a cosmogonic poem of approximately 1,100 lines inscribed on seven clay tablets, composed ca. 1100 BCE (though likely drawing on older traditions back to
A_4_23 — Bundahishn: Zoroastrian Creation and Cosmic Battle
The Bundahishn (Bundahišn, "Primal Creation") is the most important Zoroastrian cosmogonical text, composed in Middle Persian (Pahlavi) during the 9th century CE but preserving traditions that are centuries or millennia
A_4_03 — Popol Vuh: The Maya Book of Creation
The Popol Vuh ("Book of the Community" or "Book of Counsel") is the most important surviving mythological and historical text of the ancient Americas. A K'iche' Maya creation narrative, it was written down in the Latin a
A_4_38 — Navajo & Apache Creation Stories
The Navajo (Diné) and Apache (Ndé) peoples of the American Southwest share a common Athabaskan (Na-Dené) linguistic and cultural heritage that sets them apart from their Puebloan neighbors (Hopi, Zuñi, Pueblo) while also
A_4_34 — Polynesian Creation Myths: Rangi, Papa & Maui
Polynesian creation mythology represents one of the most internally coherent and geographically distributed oral cosmological systems on Earth — spanning approximately 25 million square kilometers of the Pacific Ocean ac
A_3_21 — West African Creation Texts: Bambara & Fulani Cosmogony
The Bambara (Bamana) and Fulani (Fula/Peul) peoples of the western Sahel (Mali, Guinea, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and across West Africa) possess two of the most elaborate creation mythologies in Sub-Saharan Africa
C_5_26 — World Age Doctrine: Cycles of Creation and Destruction
The World Age Doctrine — the belief that cosmic time is divided into successive ages or epochs, each ending in destruction and giving way to the next — is one of the most widespread cosmological frameworks in human thoug
C_5_33 — Oceanic Mythology: Pacific Creation Stories and Polynesian Cosmology
The mythologies of the Pacific — spanning Polynesia, Melanesia, and Micronesia across the world's largest ocean — represent some of humanity's most elaborate oral traditions, encoding navigational knowledge, ecological u
J_1_05 — Sound, Vibration, and Creation
Across at least seven independent traditions with no documented contact, creation is attributed to sound, word, or vibration. The Egyptian god Ptah speaks the world into being. The Gospel of John opens with "In the begin
B_5_15 — Popol Vuh: K'iche' Maya Creation Narrative and Supernatural Beings
The Popol Vuh is the principal mythological and cosmogonic text of the K'iche' Maya, preserved in a colonial-era transcription completed around 1554–1558 CE and first recorded in Latin script by Francisco Ximénez circa 1
ZD_1_09 — Conway's Game of Life and Recreational Mathematics
Conway's Game of Life (1970), a two-dimensional cellular automaton devised by mathematician John Horton Conway (1937–2020), stands as perhaps the most famous example of how astonishingly complex behavior can arise from e
V_1_08 — Mathematical Puzzles & Recreational Mathematics
Mathematical puzzles — problems posed for amusement, education, or intellectual challenge — have served as engines of mathematical discovery for over 4,000 years. The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus (c. 1650 BCE, Egypt) conta
M_1_08 — Ica Stones and Acámbaro Figurines
The Ica stones and Acámbaro figurines are two separate collections of artifacts cited in forbidden archaeology and creationist literature as alleged evidence that humans coexisted with dinosaurs — a claim that contradict
A_1_01 — Sumerian Texts and Tablets
The Sumerians of southern Mesopotamia (~4500–1900 BCE) created the world's first known writing system (cuneiform, ~3400 BCE) and left behind hundreds of thousands of clay tablets — the vast majority still untranslated. T
A_2_07 — 2 Enoch (Slavonic) and 3 Enoch (Hebrew Apocalypse)
2 Enoch (the "Slavonic Apocalypse of Enoch" or "Book of the Secrets of Enoch") and 3 Enoch (the "Hebrew Apocalypse of Enoch" or "Sefer Hekhalot") are two distinct pseudepigraphical texts that extend the Enochic tradition
A_4_05 — Rig Veda and Vedic Cosmology
The Rig Veda (Sanskrit: ṛgveda, "Praise-Knowledge") is the oldest surviving religious text of the Indo-European world — composed in archaic Sanskrit between approximately 1500–1200 BCE (with some hymns possibly older). I
A_4_04 — The Kojiki: Japan's Record of Ancient Matters
The Kojiki ("Record of Ancient Matters"), completed in 712 CE, is the oldest surviving literary work in Japan and the primary source for Shinto mythology and the divine origin of the Japanese imperial line. Compiled by Ō
W_4_01 — Maya Epigraphy, Astronomy, and Calendar Science
The Maya civilization developed one of the most sophisticated writing systems in the pre-Columbian Americas — a mixed logographic-syllabic script that recorded history, astronomy, mythology, and ritual on stone monuments
W_1_01 — Olmec Civilization and Serpent-Jaguar Symbolism
The Olmec civilization (~1500–400 BCE), centered in the tropical lowlands of Mexico's Gulf Coast (modern Veracruz and Tabasco), is widely considered the "mother culture" of Mesoamerica — the civilization from which later
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields