RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,198 results for "belief as tool" — page 105 of 110
D_3_00 — Americas Africa Asia Sites: Subfolder Summary
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
B_5_03 — Golems, Tulpas, and Egregores — Created and Thought-Form Entities
Across cultures, traditions describe the creation of animate beings through ritual, language, or concentrated thought — entities that exist at the boundary between artifice and life. The Jewish golem (a clay humanoid ani
B_4_15 — Celestial Messengers: Hermes, Narada, Iris, Thoth-as-Messenger
Celestial messengers — deities and supernatural beings whose primary function is to carry communications between the divine and human realms — occupy a structurally crucial position in world mythology: they are the inter
B_4_16 — Psychopomp Animals: Owls, Ravens, Dogs, Butterflies as Death Guides
Psychopomp animals — creatures believed to guide, carry, or accompany souls between the world of the living and the realm of the dead — represent a distinctive intersection of natural observation and theological imaginat
ZD_1_03 — Information as Fundamental Reality
Multiple converging lines of evidence suggest information, not matter or energy, may be the most fundamental constituent of reality. From Wheeler's "It from Bit" to the holographic principle (3D reality encoded on 2D bou
ZD_5_00 — Digital Culture Tools: Subfolder Summary
L_5_05 — Epigenetic Clocks: Measuring Biological Age
Epigenetic clocks are mathematical models that estimate biological age — the physiological age of an organism's cells and tissues — based on DNA methylation patterns at specific CpG sites (regions where a cytosine nucleo
L_5_16 — Archaeogenetics: Ancient DNA and the Human Past
Archaeogenetics — the extraction and analysis of DNA from ancient human, animal, and plant remains — has transformed our understanding of human history since the field's breakthrough in 2010. Advances in next-generation
Y_4_15 — Sensory Overload and Information Flooding: Excess as Altered State
Sensory overload — the state that arises when sensory input exceeds the brain's capacity for orderly processing — represents the mirror image of sensory deprivation as a pathway to altered consciousness. While deprivatio
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_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_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_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
P_4_11 — Indian Darshanas — Six Orthodox Systems of Hindu Philosophy
The Indian philosophical tradition produced six orthodox (āstika) systems (darśanas, literally "viewpoints") that accept the authority of the Vedas: Samkhya, Yoga, Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Mimamsa, and Vedanta. Alongside thre
P_4_04 — Art as Knowledge Encoding — Visual, Musical, and Performative Epistemologies
Before writing systems emerged (~3200 BCE), and for most of human history since, art — visual, musical, performative, and material — served as a primary means of encoding, storing, and transmitting knowledge across gener
P_4_00 — Eastern Cross Cultural: Subfolder Summary
P_5_11 — Spinoza: Substance Monism, Ethics as Geometry, Conatus
Baruch (Benedict) de Spinoza (1632-1677), a Dutch philosopher of Portuguese-Jewish origin, constructed one of the most radical and rigorous metaphysical systems in the history of philosophy — presented in his masterwork,
ZE_2_12 — Philosophy of Alchemy — Transformation as Ethical Practice
The philosophy of alchemy examines transformation as both physical practice and ethical discipline — the alchemist's pursuit of the opus magnum (Great Work) was simultaneously a material project (transmuting base metals
N_2_15 — Bogomils, Paulicians & Eastern Dualist Heresies
The Bogomils, Paulicians, and related eastern dualist movements represent one of the most persistent counter-traditions in Christian history — a chain of heretical sects spanning from 7th-century Armenia to 15th-century
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