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.
3,569 results for "de re publica" — page 117 of 179
A_4_12 — Pali Canon (Tipitaka) — Earliest Buddhist Scriptures
The Pali Canon (Tipiṭaka, "Three Baskets") is the oldest complete collection of Buddhist scriptures, preserved in the Pali language by the Theravada tradition of Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia. Transmitted orally for appro
A_4_40 — Avesta & Zoroastrian Scripture
The Avesta is the primary collection of sacred texts in Zoroastrianism, the ancient Persian religion founded by the prophet Zarathustra (Zoroaster), traditionally dated between 1500–1000 BCE. The oldest section, the Gath
A_4_20 — Mandaean Ginza Rabba: Living Gnostic Scripture
The Ginza Rabba (Ginzā Rbā, "Great Treasure"), also known as the Book of Adam, is the principal holy scripture of the Mandaeans — the world's only surviving Gnostic religion, practiced today by approximately 60,000–100,0
A_4_16 — Tibetan Book of the Dead (Bardo Thodol) and Bon Tradition
The Bardo Thodol (བར་དོ་ཐོས་གྲོལ, "Liberation Through Hearing in the Intermediate State"), popularly known as the Tibetan Book of the Dead, is a collection of funerary texts attributed to the 8th-century Indian master Pa
A_3_17 — Punic & Carthaginian Sacred Texts
The Punic (Western Phoenician) civilization, centered on Carthage (modern-day Tunisia, founded traditionally in 814 BCE by emigrants from Tyre), was one of the great Mediterranean powers for over six centuries — yet its
U_3_00 — Material Culture Craft: Subfolder Summary
U_3_16 — East Asian Painting Traditions: Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Ink Arts
East Asian painting — encompassing the interconnected but distinct traditions of China, Japan, and Korea — constitutes one of the world's longest continuous artistic traditions, spanning over two millennia and developing
U_5_20 — Sacred Geography: Landscape, Pilgrimage, and Ritual Space
Sacred geography is the study of how human cultures invest physical landscapes with spiritual, cosmological, and mythological significance — transforming terrain into hierophanic space where the divine intersects the mat
U_5_27 — Mnemonic Systems Across Cultures: Memory as Engineered Technology
Mnemonic systems are deliberately engineered cultural technologies for storing, retrieving, and transmitting knowledge across generations without writing. The peer-reviewed cognitive psychology literature confirms that t
U_5_26 — Sacred Drumming, Rhythm & Percussion Traditions
Drumming is arguably the oldest and most universal musical practice, with archaeological evidence stretching to the Neolithic period and ethnographic documentation across every inhabited continent. From Siberian shamanic
U_5_29 — Ancient Brewing: Beer, Civilization, and Sacred Fermentation
Beer may be older than bread. Archaeological evidence from Raqefet Cave (Israel, c. 13,000 BCE) and Göbekli Tepe (Turkey, c. 10,000 BCE) demonstrates that cereal fermentation predated or co-evolved with agriculture, supp
U_4_00 — Sacred Symbolic Ritual: Subfolder Summary
X_2_14 — Sports Medicine: Performance, Injury, and Recovery
Sports medicine is the multidisciplinary field concerned with the prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of injuries and conditions related to physical activity and athletic performance — encompassing exerc
X_5_21 — Regenerative Medicine & Stem Cell Science
Regenerative medicine aims to repair, replace, or regenerate damaged human cells, tissues, and organs through stem cell therapies, tissue engineering, gene therapy, and biomaterial scaffolds. The field was transformed by
X_5_28 — Circadian Rhythm Disruption: Health Consequences of Modern Light Exposure
Circadian rhythms — endogenous ~24-hour oscillations in physiology and behavior — are generated by molecular clock genes (CLOCK, BMAL1, PER, CRY) operating in virtually every cell, coordinated by the master pacemaker in
X_1_10 — Acupuncture and Meridian Theory
Acupuncture — the insertion of thin needles into specific points on the body to treat pain and disease — is one of the most widely practiced and scientifically studied forms of traditional medicine, yet remains among the
X_1_03 — Traditional Chinese Medicine: Acupuncture, Meridians, Pharmacopoeia
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is a comprehensive medical system with continuous documented practice spanning over 2,000 years — organized around the concepts of qi (vital energy), yin-yang (complementary opposites),
X_4_09 — Public Health and Sanitation
Public health and sanitation — organized efforts to prevent disease, promote health, and prolong life through collective action — have arguably saved more lives than all other medical interventions combined. Clean water,
X_3_16 — Allergy & Autoimmune Disease: Immune Dysregulation and Self-Recognition
Allergy and autoimmune disease represent opposite failures of immune discrimination: allergy is an exaggerated immune response to harmless environmental antigens (allergens), while autoimmune disease involves immune atta
X_3_01 — Surgical History: From Trepanation to Robotics
Surgery — the physical opening and manipulation of the body to treat disease, injury, or deformity — has one of the longest and most dramatic histories in medicine. Prehistory: trepanation (trephination) — cutting or bor
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields