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.

3,569 results for "de re publica" — page 127 of 179

R_3_08 Biology & Evolution

R_3_08 — Speciation Mechanisms and Reproductive Isolation

Speciation — the process by which one species splits into two or more reproductively isolated lineages — is the engine of biodiversity. Ernst Mayr's biological species concept (1942) defines species as groups of interbre

speciation reproductive isolation allopatric speciation sympatric speciation peripatric speciation parapatric speciation
R_3_06 Biology & Evolution

R_3_06 — Altruism and Cooperation in Nature

Altruism — behavior that reduces the actor's fitness while increasing the recipient's — presents a fundamental puzzle for evolutionary theory: how can natural selection favor genes that reduce their bearer's reproduction

altruism cooperation kin selection Hamilton reciprocal altruism Trivers
R_3_09 Biology & Evolution

R_3_09 — Molecular Phylogenetics and Tree of Life

Molecular phylogenetics — reconstructing evolutionary relationships from DNA, RNA, and protein sequences — has revolutionized our understanding of the tree of life since Carl Woese's landmark 1977 discovery, using small-

phylogenetics molecular clock tree of life cladistics maximum likelihood Bayesian
R_1_07 Biology & Evolution

R_1_07 — Viruses as Evolutionary Drivers — Endogenous Retroviruses and Genomic Integration

Viruses are not merely disease agents — they are fundamental architects of evolution. The human genome contains approximately ~8% endogenous retroviral (ERV) sequences (~100,000 ERV fragments), meaning roughly eight time

virus retrovirus endogenous retrovirus ERV HERV viral DNA
R_1_15 Verified Biology & Evolution

R_1_15 — The Chirality Problem: Why Life Uses Left-Handed Amino Acids

One of the deepest unsolved problems in the origin of life is homochirality — the fact that all known life on Earth uses almost exclusively L-amino acids (left-handed) for proteins and D-sugars (right-handed) for nucleic

chirality homochirality amino acids L-amino acids D-sugars stereochemistry
S_5_00 Future Technology

S_5_00 — Society Infrastructure: Subfolder Summary

F_1_28 Credible Lost Connections

F_1_28 — Ancient African Diaspora & Maritime Evidence

The ancient African diaspora — the dispersal of African peoples, cultures, technologies, crops, and genetic lineages beyond the African continent in antiquity — is a topic that encompasses some of the most significant po

African diaspora maritime Indian Ocean Madagascar Austronesian Bantu
F_1_08 Lost Connections

F_1_08 — Trans-Pacific Contact — Pre-Columbian Connections

The Pacific Ocean — covering over 165 million km² — was long assumed to be an impenetrable barrier to pre-Columbian cultural exchange between Asia/Oceania and the Americas. However, a growing body of botanical, genetic,

trans-Pacific contact sweet potato kumara Polynesian-South American contact chicken bone DNA Valdivia-Jomon pottery
F_1_13 Verified Lost Connections

F_1_13 — Lapita Culture and Pacific Colonization

The Lapita cultural complex (c. 1600–500 BCE) represents one of humanity's most remarkable episodes of maritime expansion — the colonization of the remote islands of the western and central Pacific by seafaring peoples w

Lapita Pacific colonization Austronesian Oceania pottery obsidian
F_1_05 Lost Connections

F_1_05 — Chinese Maritime Exploration Before and Including Zheng He

China possessed the world's most advanced maritime technology for centuries, culminating in Admiral Zheng He's seven extraordinary voyages (1405–1433) across the Indian Ocean. With a fleet reportedly comprising 317 ships

Zheng He treasure fleet Ming Dynasty Song Dynasty compass maritime Silk Road
F_4_07 Lost Connections

F_4_07 — Sundaland and the Eden East Hypothesis

Sundaland — the vast continental shelf of Southeast Asia that was exposed during Pleistocene low sea levels — represents one of the most significant lost landscapes in human prehistory. At the Last Glacial Maximum (~26,0

Sundaland Eden in the East Stephen Oppenheimer maritime civilization post-glacial flooding Austronesian dispersal
F_3_21 Verified Lost Connections

F_3_21 — Compass Navigation and Its Global Spread

The magnetic compass — one of China's "Four Great Inventions" — transformed navigation from a coastal, celestial, and dead-reckoning art into an all-weather, open-ocean capability. [KEY FINDING] The earliest confirmed re

compass-navigation magnetic-compass chinese-invention maritime-navigation lodestone geomancy
F_3_03 Lost Connections

F_3_03 — Domestication of the Horse and the Wheel: Technologies That Reshaped Civilization

The domestication of the horse and the invention of the wheel were among the most transformative technological developments in human history, fundamentally altering transportation, warfare, trade, and social organization

horse domestication wheel invention chariot Botai Sintashta spoked wheel
F_3_09 Verified Lost Connections

F_3_09 — Musical Instrument Diffusion and Shared Traditions

Musical instruments represent some of the oldest artifacts of human culture and their distribution patterns across the globe illuminate deep connections — and sometimes startling independent inventions — among widely sep

musical instrument diffusion drum lyre harp flute
F_3_00 Lost Connections

F_3_00 — Diffusion Spread Knowledge: Subfolder Summary

ZA_2_03 Physics & Quantum

ZA_2_03 — General and Special Relativity — Einstein's Revolution

Albert Einstein's two theories of relativity — special (1905) and general (1915) — fundamentally reshaped the understanding of space, time, mass, energy, and gravity. Special relativity, built on Lorentz invariance and t

special relativity general relativity Einstein Lorentz invariance E=mc² time dilation
ZA_1_06 Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_06 — Quantum Tunneling: Traversing the Classically Forbidden

Quantum tunneling is the phenomenon where particles traverse energy barriers that classical physics strictly forbids — a direct consequence of quantum mechanics' wave-like description of matter. First explained by George

quantum tunneling barrier penetration wave function probability amplitude alpha decay Gamow
ZA_1_15 Credible Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_15 — Quantum Biology Revisited: Quantum Effects in Living Systems

Quantum biology investigates whether non-trivial quantum-mechanical effects — coherence, entanglement, tunneling, and superposition — play functional roles in biological processes, rather than being washed out by the war

quantum biology photosynthesis coherence magnetoreception enzyme tunneling olfaction FMO complex
ZA_1_01 Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_01 — Quantum Entanglement and Non-Locality Deep Dive

Quantum entanglement — the phenomenon whereby two or more particles become correlated such that the quantum state of each cannot be described independently — is one of the most experimentally confirmed and conceptually d

quantum entanglement non-locality EPR paradox Bell's theorem Bell inequality Aspect experiment
ZA_1_20 Verified Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_20 — False Vacuum Decay: Metastability, Bubble Nucleation & Cosmic Catastrophe

False vacuum decay — the quantum mechanical tunneling of the universe from a metastable vacuum state to a lower-energy true vacuum — represents one of the most dramatic predictions of quantum field theory and, if the cur

false-vacuum-decay metastability bubble-nucleation coleman-de-luccia higgs-field electroweak-vacuum