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.
1,081 results for "Green Man" — page 13 of 55
Y_4_07 — Hypnosis — History, Neuroscience, and Therapeutic Application
Hypnosis has evolved from Franz Mesmer's "animal magnetism" theory (1770s) through James Braid's neurological reframing (1843) and James Esdaile's surgical applications in India to Milton Erickson's indirect hypnotherapy
Y_4_05 — Dreams, Dream Incubation, and Oneiric Knowledge
Dreams have been treated as a source of knowledge, prophecy, and divine communication in virtually every civilization. Ancient Mesopotamians maintained professional dream interpreters (šāʾilu) and compiled dream omen com
Y_5_14 — Drumming and Rhythmic Entrainment: Percussive Paths to Trance
Drumming and rhythmic entrainment — the use of sustained, repetitive percussive sound to alter consciousness — is one of the oldest and most universal methods of inducing trance states across human cultures. From the fra
Y_1_03 — Classical Antiquity Entheogens Synthesis
This document examines Classical Antiquity Entheogens Synthesis, a topic within the Consciousness research area. Key areas of investigation include Were Ancient Mediterranean Religions Entheogenic?, Why This Matters, The
Y_1_01 — Altered States, Psychedelics & Ancient Knowledge
Psychoactive substances played a significant — possibly central — role in ancient knowledge traditions. The Eleusinian Mysteries (kykeon), Vedic tradition (Soma), Egyptian practice (blue lotus), and Mesoamerican religion
H_1_10 — Damnatio Memoriae and State-Directed Historical Erasure
Damnatio memoriae ("condemnation of memory") — the deliberate, systematic erasure of an individual, event, or idea from the historical record by a governing authority — is one of the oldest and most persistent forms of i
H_1_09 — Translation Losses and Textual Transmission Chains
Before the printing press (1440s CE), all knowledge transmission depended on manual copying (scribal reproduction of manuscripts) and oral tradition — both inherently lossy processes. Every manuscript copy introduced pot
H_4_29 — Food Industry Science Suppression
The systematic influence of the food industry on nutrition science, dietary guidelines, and public health policy represents one of the most extensively documented cases of corporate science suppression in the modern era
P_3_11 — Neoplatonism: Plotinus, Proclus, and the One
Neoplatonism is the philosophical and spiritual system founded by Plotinus (c. 204-270 CE) and elaborated by his successors — notably Porphyry (c. 234-305), Iamblichus (c. 245-325), and Proclus (412-485) — which reinterp
P_4_19 — Indian Logic Traditions
The Indian traditions of logic and epistemology (pramāṇa-śāstra) represent one of the most sophisticated and independently developed systems of formal reasoning in human intellectual history, spanning over two millennia
P_5_07 — Hermeneutics and Interpretation Theory
Hermeneutics — the theory and practice of interpretation — originated in biblical and classical textual criticism but expanded through the 19th and 20th centuries into a comprehensive philosophical framework addressing h
P_2_09 — Cosmopolitanism and Global Ethics
Cosmopolitanism — from the Greek kosmopolitēs ("citizen of the world") — is the philosophical tradition asserting that all human beings belong to a single moral community regardless of nationality, ethnicity, or culture.
ZE_5_15 — Ethics of Disability: Social Models, Access, and Inclusion
The ethics of disability has been transformed over the past five decades by the shift from the medical model — which defines disability as individual pathology to be cured or managed — to the social model — which defines
ZE_5_07 — Ethics of Migration: Borders, Refugees, and the Right to Move
Migration ethics addresses one of the most consequential moral and political questions of the 21st century: who has the right to cross borders, who has the right to exclude, and what obligations states and individuals ow
ZE_5_11 — Moral Relativism vs. Universalism: Cross-Cultural Moral Disagreement
The debate between moral relativism and moral universalism is among the most fundamental in ethics. Relativism holds that moral judgments are valid only relative to a cultural, historical, or individual framework — there
ZE_5_18 — Research Ethics & Global Standards
Research ethics — the principles, regulations, and institutional structures governing the conduct of research involving human subjects, animals, and sensitive data — emerged as a formal discipline from the horrors of Naz
ZE_2_02 — Prophecy, Divination, and Oracular Traditions
Divination — the practice of obtaining knowledge of the unknown (future, hidden, distant) through non-ordinary means — is arguably the most universal religious/intellectual practice in human history. Every documented civ
N_1_12 — Neoplatonic Schools: Plotinus, Iamblichus, and the Academies
Neoplatonism — the philosophical tradition founded by Plotinus (204-270 CE) and developed by his successors through the 6th century — was the dominant intellectual movement of late antiquity and the last great flowering
M_5_06 — Map Controversies: Vinland Map, Zeno Map, Buache Map
Beyond the famous Piri Reis map (treated in M_5_03), several other historical maps have generated intense controversy over whether they depict geographical knowledge that "shouldn't" have existed at the time they were cr
M_5_05 — Archaeological Hoaxes and Forgeries — A Cautionary Catalog
The history of archaeology is punctuated by famous frauds, hoaxes, and forgeries — intentional deceptions that have misled researchers, distorted public understanding, and, in some cases, caused decades of wasted scholar
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