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.
2,695 results for "de natura deorum" — page 131 of 135
X_2_15 — Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Therapy
Regenerative medicine — defined as "the process of replacing, engineering, or regenerating human or animal cells, tissues, or organs to restore or establish normal function" — is among the most rapidly advancing frontier
X_5_16 — Telemedicine & Digital Health: Remote Care Revolution
Telemedicine — the delivery of healthcare services through telecommunications technology — has evolved from an experimental novelty (NASA's 1960s Space Technology Applied to Rural Papago Advanced Health Care project) int
X_5_30 — Heart Rate Variability: Autonomic Function, Stress, and Integrative Health
Heart rate variability (HRV) — the variation in time intervals between consecutive heartbeats — is a non-invasive biomarker of autonomic nervous system (ANS) function that has emerged as one of the most widely studied ph
X_5_27 — Stem Cell Medicine and Regenerative Therapy
Stem cell medicine — the therapeutic use of cells capable of self-renewal and differentiation into specialized cell types — has progressed from a theoretical concept to clinical reality over six decades. James Till and E
W_4_14 — Inca Empire: Tawantinsuyu, Quipu, and Vertical Archipelago
Tawantinsuyu ("The Four Parts Together") — the Inca Empire — was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America and the largest empire in the Southern Hemisphere, stretching ~4,000 km along the Andes from modern Colombia to
W_1_24 — Tartessos: Iberian Peninsula's Lost Civilization
Tartessos was an ancient civilization or polity centered in southwestern Iberia (modern Andalusia, Spain), flourishing from approximately 1100–550 BCE in the lower Guadalquivir River valley, the Huelva coastal region, an
W_1_07 — Etruscan Religion and Mystery Traditions
The Etruscans (self-named Rasenna) — who dominated central Italy from ~800–300 BCE before being absorbed by Rome — possessed one of antiquity's most elaborate divination and religious systems, yet their language remains
W_5_26 — Chachapoya: Warriors of the Clouds
The Chachapoya ("People of the Clouds") were a pre-Inca civilization inhabiting the cloud forests of northeastern Peru's Amazonas region (~800–1470 CE). Known for their monumental fortress of Kuelap — a massive stone cit
W_5_20 — Renaissance Italian City-States: Commerce, Culture, and Innovation
The Italian Renaissance city-states (c. 1300–1600) — principally Florence, Venice, Milan, Genoa, and the Papal States, along with dozens of smaller polities — constituted one of history's most productive experiments in p
W_5_15 — Aboriginal Australian Civilizations: 65,000 Years of Continuous Culture
Aboriginal Australians represent the oldest continuous cultural tradition in the world — with archaeological evidence of human occupation of the Australian continent dating back at least 65,000 years (Madjedbebe rock she
TOA_Transparency — Research Methodology & Verification Overview
Theories of Anything is a 3,627-document multi-disciplinary research knowledge base built through a human–AI partnership (Gortiva and Cairn, a Claude-based model from Anthropic). Every document follows an identical templ
ZH_4_14 — Sky Burials, Celestial Afterlives, and Astral Religion
Across human cultures, the celestial realm — the sky, stars, Sun, and Moon — has been imagined as the destination of the soul after death, the abode of gods and ancestors, and the matrix of cosmic justice. Astral religio
ZH_5_24 — Zoroastrian Astral Cosmology and Fire-Temple Astronomy
Zoroastrianism — one of the world's oldest continuously practiced religions, founded by Zarathustra (dates debated: c. 1500–600 BCE) in Greater Iran — embedded astronomical observation deeply into its cosmology, calendar
ZH_5_12 — Citizen Astronomy: Variable Star Observers to Exoplanet Hunters
Astronomy is one of the very few sciences where non-professional observers — amateurs, hobbyists, and citizen scientists — continue to make significant, publishable contributions to research alongside professionals. This
ZH_5_25 — Polynesian Star Navigation and Pacific Migration
Polynesian wayfinding — the ability to navigate thousands of kilometers of open ocean without instruments — represents one of humanity's supreme intellectual achievements. Between c. 3,000 BCE and 1250 CE, Austronesian-s
C_1_20 — The Shadow Archetype in World Mythology
The Shadow archetype, articulated by Carl Gustav Jung as a fundamental component of the psyche, manifests across world mythologies as the dark double, the rejected brother, or the monstrous other that heroes must confron
C_0_00 — Mythology & Cross-Cultural: Section Summary
Z_5_21 — Mobile Genetic Elements: Transposons, Retrotransposons, and Genomic Plasticity
Mobile genetic elements (MGEs) — DNA sequences capable of moving within and between genomes — constitute a staggering ~45% of the human genome, far exceeding the ~1.5% that encodes proteins. Discovered by Barbara McClint
Z_5_22 — Bacteriophage Biology: Viruses That Shape the Microbial World
Bacteriophages (phages) — viruses that exclusively infect bacteria — are the most abundant biological entities on Earth, with an estimated global population of ~10³¹ particles, outnumbering bacteria by approximately 10:1
Z_5_23 — Gene Drives: CRISPR-Based Inheritance Manipulation and Ecological Engineering
A gene drive is a genetic engineering technology that biases inheritance in sexually reproducing organisms, causing a modified gene to spread through a population at rates far exceeding normal Mendelian inheritance (~50%
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