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 123 of 179
ZC_5_22 — Māori Culture: Whakapapa, Mana, and the Living Knowledge of Aotearoa
The Māori — the indigenous Polynesian people of Aotearoa (New Zealand) — developed one of the most sophisticated oral-knowledge civilizations in human history during approximately 700 years of isolation following their a
ZC_5_02 — Sociology of Technology: Social Shaping, Actor-Networks, and Technological Determinism
The sociology of technology (a core subfield of Science and Technology Studies — STS) investigates how social, economic, political, and cultural factors shape the development, design, adoption, and consequences of techno
ZC_4_02 — Kinship Systems and Social Organization Across Cultures
Kinship — the system of social relationships and categories through which human societies classify relatives, define obligations, regulate marriage, organize inheritance, and structure political authority — is the founda
ZC_4_00 — Anthropology Culture: Subfolder Summary
G_1_19 — Acoustic Archaeology: Sound Mapping of Ancient Structures
Acoustic archaeology (archaeoacoustics) is an emerging interdisciplinary field that investigates the sonic properties of ancient structures, landscapes, and artifacts to understand how past peoples experienced and manipu
G_3_00 — Theoretical Frameworks: Subfolder Summary
G_3_07 — Cymatics — Visible Sound and the Physics of Vibration
Cymatics — from the Greek κῦμα (kyma, "wave") — is the study of visible sound patterns formed when a vibrating surface (plate, membrane, or fluid) organizes matter (sand, powder, liquid) into geometric configurations at
G_2_11 — Ethnoarchaeology — Living Analogies for Past Behavior
Ethnoarchaeology is the study of living or recently documented societies — their material culture, spatial organization, subsistence strategies, craft production, architecture, refuse disposal, and social practices — wit
O_2_03 — Plate Tectonics, Continental Drift, and Deep Earth
Plate tectonics — the theory that Earth's outer shell (lithosphere) is divided into rigid plates that move, collide, and separate atop a convecting asthenosphere — is one of the great unifying theories of modern science.
O_2_12 — Great Rift Valley: Continental Splitting and Hominid Cradle
The East African Rift System (EARS) — commonly called the Great Rift Valley — is one of Earth's most geologically dramatic and scientifically significant features: an active continental rift zone stretching approximately
O_2_06 — Richat Structure — Saharan Eye and Atlantis Claims
The Richat Structure (also called the Eye of the Sahara or Guelb er Richat) is a prominent circular geological formation approximately 40–50 km in diameter located on the Adrar Plateau in west-central Mauritania (21°07′N
O_4_01 — Anomalous Zones: Skinwalker Ranch, Bermuda Triangle & Window Areas
"Anomalous zones" — geographic areas with allegedly high concentrations of unexplained phenomena — range from the verified-as-government-studied (Skinwalker Ranch/AAWSAP) to the largely debunked (Bermuda Triangle). Skinw
O_3_07 — Coral Reefs as Ancient Climate Archives
Coral skeletons serve as high-resolution natural archives of past ocean and climate conditions, recording temperature, salinity, ocean chemistry, and volcanic events in their calcium carbonate growth bands — much like tr
O_5_01 — Permafrost, Cryosphere, and Frozen Time Capsules
Permafrost — permanently frozen ground covering approximately 25% of the Northern Hemisphere's land surface — is simultaneously a geological archive, a biological deep freeze, and a ticking carbon time bomb. Ice cores ex
O_5_00 — Climate Records Ecology: Subfolder Summary
O_5_15 — Climate Stability Mechanisms: Feedbacks, Tipping Points, and Earth System Resilience
Earth's climate has maintained conditions hospitable to life for approximately 4 billion years despite dramatic variations in solar luminosity (the Sun was ~30% fainter in the Archean than today — the Faint Young Sun par
O_5_13 — Paleosols and Ancient Soils: Climate Records in Earth
Paleosols — ancient soils preserved in the geological record — are among the most valuable but often overlooked records of past environmental conditions. When soils are buried by subsequent sedimentation (flooding, volca
O_5_17 — Deep Time: Geological Chronology and the Scale of Earth History
Deep time is the concept that Earth's geological history extends across approximately 4.54 billion years — a scale so vast that human civilization occupies less than 0.00001% of it. First articulated by James Hutton in 1
T_1_04 — Developmental Psychology — From Piaget to Attachment Theory
Developmental psychology traces psychological changes across the human lifespan, from prenatal development through aging. Jean Piaget's cognitive stage theory, Lev Vygotsky's sociocultural approach, John Bowlby's attachm
T_5_21 — Art of Memory: Mnemonic Systems from Simonides to Memory Palaces
The art of memory (ars memoriae) — systematic techniques for encoding, storing, and retrieving information through spatial and imagistic mnemonics — is among humanity's oldest cognitive technologies. The Method of Loci (
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