RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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.

3,721 results for "Rajaraja I" — page 111 of 187

B_3_11 Verified Beings & Entities

B_3_11 — Kitsune, Huli Jing, and Fox Spirits in East Asian Tradition

Fox spirits — beings that have cultivated supernatural powers through longevity, meditation, or absorbing celestial energy — represent one of the most richly developed and culturally significant categories of supernatura

kitsune fox spirit huli jing kumiho nine-tailed fox shapeshifting
B_3_13 Verified Beings & Entities

B_3_13 — Sphinx Entities: Guardian Riddle-Keepers Beyond Giza

The Sphinx — a composite creature with a lion's body and a human (or divine) head — appears as a guardian being across multiple civilizations of the ancient world, functioning as a liminal protector stationed at threshol

sphinx Egyptian sphinx Greek sphinx Mesopotamian lamassu shedu guardian figure
B_3_08 Beings & Entities

B_3_08 — Garuda — Divine Eagle and Serpent Enemy

Garuda (Sanskrit: गरुड, Garuḍa) is the divine eagle of Hindu and Buddhist mythology — the king of birds, the eternal enemy of serpents (nāgas), and the mount (vāhana) of the god Viṣṇu. First attested in the Rig Veda (~15

Garuda Garuḍa eagle bird serpent enemy nāga
ZD_1_12 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_1_12 — Information Geometry and Fisher Information

Information geometry is the mathematical field that applies differential geometry — the mathematics of curved spaces, manifolds, metrics, and connections — to the study of probability distributions and statistical models

information geometry Fisher information statistical manifold Riemannian geometry metric tensor natural gradient
ZD_1_08 Information & Computation

ZD_1_08 — Lambda Calculus and Functional Programming

Lambda calculus, invented by Alonzo Church in the 1930s as a formal system for expressing computation via function abstraction and application, stands alongside Turing machines as a foundational model of computation. Chu

lambda calculus functional programming Church Turing computability Church-Turing thesis
ZD_1_02 Information & Computation

ZD_1_02 — Information Theory — Shannon, Entropy, and the Bit

Claude Shannon's 1948 paper "A Mathematical Theory of Communication" is one of the most consequential scientific publications of the 20th century. It defined information quantitatively — measured in bits — independent of

information theory Claude Shannon entropy bit channel capacity noise
ZD_1_01 Information & Computation

ZD_1_01 — Algorithms, Computation, and the Limits of Knowledge

An algorithm is a finite, unambiguous sequence of instructions for solving a problem — a concept formalized independently by Alan Turing (Turing machine, 1936) and Alonzo Church (lambda calculus) in response to David Hil

algorithms computation Turing machine Gödel incompleteness Church-Turing thesis
ZD_1_06 Information & Computation

ZD_1_06 — Boolean Algebra and Logic Gates: The Mathematics of Digital Systems

Boolean algebra, formalized by George Boole in 1854, reduces logical reasoning to algebraic manipulation of binary values (TRUE/FALSE, 1/0). This seemingly simple mathematical system became the foundation of the entire d

Boolean algebra logic gates AND OR NOT NAND
ZD_1_17 Credible Information & Computation

ZD_1_17 — Integrated Information Theory

Integrated Information Theory (IIT) is a mathematical theory of consciousness developed by Giulio Tononi (University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2004; IIT 3.0, 2014; IIT 4.0, 2022) that attempts to explain what consciousness i

integrated-information-theory iit consciousness phi giulio-tononi qualia
ZD_1_15 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_1_15 — Quantum Information Theory: Entanglement, Quantum Computing, and Information Bounds

Quantum information theory — the study of how information is encoded, processed, communicated, and protected using quantum mechanical systems — represents one of the most transformative intellectual developments at the i

quantum information qubit entanglement quantum computing quantum error correction Shor algorithm
ZD_1_18 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_1_18 — Quantum Error Correction

Quantum error correction (QEC) protects quantum information against decoherence and operational error by encoding a single logical qubit redundantly across many physical qubits, then detecting errors via syndrome measure

quantum error correction QEC Shor code Steane code CSS code stabilizer formalism
ZD_1_13 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_1_13 — Kolmogorov Complexity and Algorithmic Information Theory

Kolmogorov complexity (also called algorithmic complexity, descriptive complexity, or program-size complexity) — the length of the shortest computer program (on a fixed universal Turing machine) that produces a given str

Kolmogorov complexity algorithmic information theory algorithmic randomness incompressibility minimal description length Solomonoff
ZD_1_16 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_1_16 — Quantum Information Theory

Quantum information theory — the study of how information is encoded, processed, and transmitted using quantum mechanical systems — has emerged as one of the most transformative research fields of the 21st century, unify

quantum-information qubit quantum-entanglement quantum-error-correction quantum-computing bell-inequality
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_03 Information & Computation

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

information It from Bit Wheeler holographic principle Bekenstein bound Shannon entropy
ZD_1_07 Information & Computation

ZD_1_07 — Cellular Automata and Rule Systems: Emergence from Simple Rules

Cellular automata (CA) are discrete computational systems where simple local rules applied to a grid of cells generate complex global behavior — demonstrating that complexity can emerge from simplicity without central co

cellular automata Conway's Game of Life Stephen Wolfram Rule 110 emergence self-organization
ZD_1_11 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_1_11 — Turing Machine, Computability, and the Limits of Computation

The Turing machine — a mathematical model of computation defined by Alan Turing in his 1936 paper "On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem" — is the foundational formalism of theoretical co

Turing machine computability decidability halting problem Church-Turing thesis algorithm
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_1_04 Information & Computation

ZD_1_04 — Coding Theory & Error Correction

Coding theory — the mathematics of reliable communication over unreliable channels — was founded by Claude Shannon (1948), who proved the existence of channel capacity (a maximum rate at which information can be transmit

coding theory error correction Shannon Hamming code Reed-Solomon information theory
ZD_3_05 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_3_05 — Compiler Theory and Parsing

Compiler theory — the science of translating high-level programming languages into machine-executable code — is one of the most mathematically rigorous and practically impactful subfields of computer science. Compilers b

compiler parsing lexical analysis syntax analysis code generation optimization