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.

3,721 results for "i ching" — page 149 of 187

S_1_10 Verified Future Technology

S_1_10 — Internet of Things and Ubiquitous Computing

The Internet of Things (IoT) refers to the network of physical objects — devices, vehicles, appliances, industrial equipment, wearables, environmental sensors — embedded with electronics, software, and connectivity that

Internet of Things IoT ubiquitous computing edge computing smart home industrial IoT
S_1_01 Future Technology

S_1_01 — Artificial General Intelligence and Existential Risk

Artificial General Intelligence — a system with human-level or greater cognitive capabilities across ALL domains — may be the most consequential invention in human history. Current foundational AI systems (GPT-4, Claude,

AGI artificial general intelligence superintelligence alignment problem existential risk x-risk
S_1_11 Verified Future Technology

S_1_11 — Machine Learning and Deep Learning

Machine learning (ML) is the subfield of AI in which systems learn patterns from data rather than being explicitly programmed. Deep learning uses artificial neural networks with many layers (hence "deep") to learn hierar

machine learning deep learning neural networks artificial intelligence convolutional neural networks CNN
S_3_08 Verified Future Technology

S_3_08 — Carbon Capture and Negative Emissions

Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) captures CO₂ from point sources (power plants, industrial facilities) before it enters the atmosphere; Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) — also called negative emissions technologies (NETs) —

carbon capture CCS CCUS direct air capture DAC BECCS
S_3_16 Verified Future Technology

S_3_16 — Direct Air Carbon Capture: Technology, Thermodynamics, and Climate Deployment

Direct Air Capture (DAC) — the technological extraction of CO₂ directly from ambient atmospheric air (currently at ~424 ppm, or 0.042%) — represents one of the most critical and technically challenging negative emissions

direct air capture DAC carbon capture negative emissions Climeworks Carbon Engineering
S_3_05 Future Technology

S_3_05 — Food Security, Agricultural Technology, and the Future of Feeding Humanity

Human civilization feeds 8+ billion people through an agricultural system built on the Green Revolution's high-yield crop varieties, synthetic fertilizers, and mechanization — achieving what Malthusian pessimists of the

food security agricultural technology Green Revolution Norman Borlaug GMO genetically modified organisms
S_3_12 Verified Future Technology

S_3_12 — Biodegradable Materials and Green Chemistry

Green chemistry — formalized by Paul Anastas and John Warner (1998, Green Chemistry: Theory and Practice) with Twelve Principles including waste prevention, atom economy, less hazardous synthesis, designed degradation, r

biodegradable materials green chemistry bioplastics PLA PHA compostable packaging
S_3_11 Verified Future Technology

S_3_11 — Wireless Power and Energy Transmission

Wireless power transmission (WPT) transfers electrical energy without physical conductors using electromagnetic fields. Near-field (non-radiative): Inductive coupling — two coils in close proximity transfer power via osc

wireless power energy transmission inductive coupling resonant coupling microwave power beaming Nikola Tesla
S_3_17 Credible Future Technology

S_3_17 — Nuclear Fusion Energy

Nuclear fusion — the process of combining light atomic nuclei into heavier ones, releasing vast amounts of energy (the mechanism powering the Sun and stars) — has been pursued as a potential source of virtually limitless

nuclear-fusion iter tokamak nif-ignition stellarator plasma-confinement
S_3_07 Verified Future Technology

S_3_07 — Desalination and Water Technology

Water scarcity affects ~2 billion people globally (UNESCO, 2023), with demand projected to exceed supply by 40% by 2030 in many regions due to population growth, urbanization, agriculture, and climate change. Desalinatio

desalination water technology reverse osmosis water scarcity water purification membrane technology
S_3_18 Verified Future Technology

S_3_18 — Graphene and Nanotube Applications

Graphene — a single atomic layer of carbon atoms arranged in a two-dimensional hexagonal (honeycomb) lattice — and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) — seamless cylinders of rolled graphene sheets — represent two of the most extrao

graphene carbon nanotube CNT Geim Novoselov two-dimensional material
S_3_03 Future Technology

S_3_03 — Geoengineering — Climate Intervention, Solar Radiation Management, and Carbon Dioxide Removal

Geoengineering encompasses large-scale deliberate interventions in the Earth's climate system to counteract global warming. Two broad categories exist: Solar Radiation Management (SRM), which reflects incoming sunlight t

geoengineering climate engineering climate intervention solar radiation management SRM stratospheric aerosol injection
S_3_15 Verified Future Technology

S_3_15 — Battery Technology: Lithium-Ion, Solid-State, and Grid-Scale Storage

Battery technology — electrochemical energy storage — is the critical enabler of the electric vehicle revolution, grid-scale renewable energy storage, portable electronics, and the broader energy transition away from fos

battery lithium-ion solid-state battery energy storage grid-scale LFP
S_3_14 Credible Future Technology

S_3_14 — Agricultural Robotics: Precision Farming and Automated Harvest

Agricultural robotics and precision farming — the application of robotics, sensors, GPS, AI, and data analytics to optimize agricultural production — are transforming food production in response to growing demand (global

agricultural robotics precision agriculture precision farming autonomous tractor harvesting robot drone agriculture
S_3_06 Verified Future Technology

S_3_06 — Renewable Energy Transformation

The renewable energy transformation is the most rapid energy technology transition in history. Solar photovoltaics (PV): the cost of solar PV has fallen ~99% since 1976 and ~90% since 2010, following Swanson's Law (the p

renewable energy solar wind energy transition photovoltaics grid storage
S_3_01 Future Technology

S_3_01 — Climate Change, Civilization, and Deep-Time Context

Earth's climate has always changed — but the current rate and mechanism are unprecedented in geological history. This document places the modern climate crisis within the deep-time context that the corpus demands: from t

climate change anthropocene PETM Green Sahara tipping points climate refugees
S_3_09 Verified Future Technology

S_3_09 — Vertical Farming and Controlled Environment Agriculture

Vertical farming grows crops in stacked layers inside controlled indoor environments, typically using hydroponics (nutrient-rich water without soil), aeroponics (misting roots with nutrient solution), or aquaponics (inte

vertical farming controlled environment agriculture CEA indoor farming hydroponics aeroponics
S_3_13 Verified Future Technology

S_3_13 — Nuclear Fusion Progress: ITER, NIF Ignition, and Compact Tokamaks

Nuclear fusion — the process powering stars, in which light atomic nuclei combine to form heavier nuclei and release enormous energy — has been pursued as a potential source of virtually unlimited, clean energy since the

nuclear fusion tokamak stellarator ITER NIF ignition
S_3_10 Verified Future Technology

S_3_10 — Ocean Technology and Deep-Sea Exploration

The deep ocean remains Earth's most underexplored frontier — less than 25% of the ocean floor has been mapped at high resolution (>100 m), and only a tiny fraction has been directly observed or sampled. Human-occupied ve

ocean technology deep-sea exploration submersible ROV AUV oceanography
S_5_14 Credible Future Technology

S_5_14 — Digital Identity: Biometrics, Self-Sovereign Identity, and Authentication

Digital identity — the set of attributes, credentials, and identifiers that represent a person in digital systems — is fundamental to online commerce, government services, healthcare, travel, and social interaction. An e

digital identity biometrics fingerprint facial recognition iris scan authentication