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

1,223 results for "Cradle of Humankind" — page 10 of 62

B_5_06 Beings & Entities

B_5_06 — Deification of Natural Phenomena: Thunder, Earthquakes, Disease as Entities

Across virtually every documented human culture, natural phenomena — storms, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, epidemics, drought — have been personified as intentional agents: gods, demons, or spirits with desires, emoti

agency detection HADD hyperactive agency detection device animism personification storm gods
B_5_16 Verified Beings & Entities

B_5_16 — Rod of Asclepius: Serpent Symbolism in Medicine

The Rod of Asclepius — a single serpent entwined around a rough staff — is the most enduring medical symbol in Western civilization, originating from the Greek healing deity Asclepius and still used by the World Health O

rod of Asclepius caduceus serpent symbolism Asclepius healing serpent WHO logo
B_4_03 Beings & Entities

B_4_03 — Psychopomp Traditions — Guides of the Dead Across Cultures

A psychopomp (from Greek psychopompos — "guide of souls") is a being, deity, spirit, or figure whose primary function is to escort the dead from the world of the living to the afterlife. This is one of the most universal

psychopomp guide of souls Hermes Anubis Valkyrie Charon
B_1_06 Beings & Entities

B_1_06 — Inanna / Ishtar — Queen of Heaven and Earth

Inanna (Sumerian: 𒀭𒈹, d.INANNA) / Ishtar (Akkadian: 𒀭𒌋𒁯, d.IŠTAR) is the most important goddess of ancient Mesopotamia — the divine personification of love, sexuality, war, and political power, identified with the planet

Inanna Ishtar Sumerian Akkadian Babylonian Queen of Heaven
B_1_02 Beings & Entities

B_1_02 — Thoth — Egyptian God of Writing, Wisdom, and Cosmic Order

Thoth (Egyptian: Ḏḥwty, conventionally vocalized as Djehuty) is the Egyptian deity of writing, wisdom, measurement, the moon, magic, and cosmic order — the divine scribe who records the judgment of the dead, invents hier

Thoth Djehuty Hermes Trismegistus ibis baboon Egyptian wisdom deity
ZD_1_09 Information & Computation

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

Game of Life cellular automata Conway recreational information-computation emergence self-replication
ZD_1_05 Information & Computation

ZD_1_05 — Computational Complexity: P vs NP and the Limits of Efficient Computation

Computational complexity theory classifies problems not by whether they can be solved, but by how efficiently they can be solved — and its central open question, P vs NP, is one of the seven Clay Millennium Prize Problem

computational complexity P vs NP NP-completeness complexity classes polynomial time Turing machines
ZD_5_02 Credible Information & Computation

ZD_5_02 — Digital Preservation and the Longevity of Knowledge

Digital preservation — the set of policies, strategies, and actions required to ensure continued access to digital information over time — addresses one of the great paradoxes of the information age: humanity is producin

digital preservation data longevity format obsolescence bit rot digital dark age archiving
ZD_5_18 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_5_18 — Complexity Science: The Santa Fe Institute and the Science of Emergence

Complexity science — the interdisciplinary study of systems composed of many interacting components whose collective behavior cannot be predicted from individual parts — emerged as a distinct field in the 1980s, catalyze

complexity science santa fe institute emergence complex adaptive systems self-organization agent-based modeling
ZD_4_10 Credible Information & Computation

ZD_4_10 — Complexity Theory in Biology — Kauffman, Wolfram, Edge of Chaos

The application of complexity theory to biology — the study of how complex, adaptive, self-organizing structures and behaviors emerge in living systems from the interactions of simpler components — has been one of the mo

complexity edge of chaos self-organization emergence Kauffman Wolfram
ZD_2_15 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_2_15 — Transformer Architecture: Self-Attention and the Foundation of Modern AI

The transformer is a neural network architecture introduced in 2017 that replaced recurrent and convolutional models as the dominant paradigm in artificial intelligence. Its core innovation — the self-attention mechanism

transformer self-attention multi-head attention positional encoding encoder-decoder BERT
L_1_18 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_1_18 — Human Migration: Out of Africa, Dispersal Patterns, and the Peopling of the World

The migration of Homo sapiens out of Africa and across the globe is one of the most extensively studied processes in human evolutionary history, now reconstructed through converging evidence from genetics (mitochondrial

human migration Out of Africa dispersal ancient DNA population genetics Homo sapiens
L_4_02 Genetics & Origins

L_4_02 — Mendel, Inheritance, and the Rediscovery of Genetics

Gregor Johann Mendel (1822–1884), an Augustinian friar at the St. Thomas Abbey in Brno (then part of the Austrian Empire), conducted the foundational experiments in genetics by systematically crossing garden pea plants (

Gregor Mendel Mendelian inheritance law of segregation law of independent assortment dominant recessive
Y_3_11 Verified Altered States

Y_3_11 — Biofeedback and Neurofeedback

Biofeedback is the process of using real-time monitoring of physiological signals — heart rate, muscle tension, skin conductance, brainwave patterns — to train voluntary control over processes normally considered involun

biofeedback neurofeedback EEG biofeedback brain-computer interface operant conditioning alpha training
Y_3_08 Altered States

Y_3_08 — Breathwork and Holotropic States of Consciousness

Deliberate manipulation of breathing patterns to alter consciousness is among the oldest and most widespread human practices, documented in yogic pranayama (circa 500 BCE, Yoga Sutras of Patanjali), Tibetan tummo (inner-

breathwork holotropic breathwork Stanislav Grof hyperventilation respiratory alkalosis hypocapnia
Y_3_03 Altered States

Y_3_03 — Flow States and Peak Performance — Psychology of Optimal Experience

Flow — the state of complete absorption in an activity where self-awareness dissolves and performance peaks — was systematically described by psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi beginning in 1975 and formalized in his l

flow state Csikszentmihalyi peak performance transient hypofrontality optimal experience mushin
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_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_1_13 Verified Suppression & Thesis

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

fall of rome roman collapse dark ages early middle ages knowledge loss library destruction
H_1_05 Suppression & Thesis

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

Qin Shi Huang book burning burying of scholars fenshu kengru Legalism Li Si