RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,717 documents 34 sections 47,686 citations 34,596+ keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

3,106 results for "Tao Te Ching" — page 2 of 156

ZG_2_12 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_12 — Language Contact and Substrate Effects in Ancient Civilizations

Language contact — the situation in which speakers of different languages interact and their languages influence one another — is one of the most powerful forces shaping linguistic change, and its effects are pervasive t

language contact substrate superstrate adstrate borrowing pidgin
ZG_5_10 Credible Linguistics & Communication

ZG_5_10 — Internet Language: Emoji, Netlingo, and Digital Communication Pragmatics

Internet language — the varieties of written, spoken, and multimodal language shaped by digital communication technologies — represents one of the most rapid and widespread shifts in human communicative practice in histo

internet language netspeak emoji emoticon digital communication CMC
ZG_4_10 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_10 — Code-Switching and Multilingual Discourse

Code-switching is the practice of alternating between two or more languages (or language varieties) within a single conversation, sentence, or even a single word — a phenomenon observed wherever multilingual speakers int

code-switching code-mixing translanguaging bilingualism multilingualism matrix language
ZG_4_12 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_12 — Second Language Acquisition: Interlanguage, Critical Period, and SLA

Second Language Acquisition (SLA) — the study of how people learn languages beyond their first (L1) — is a multidisciplinary field drawing on linguistics, psychology, cognitive science, and education. Central questions i

second language acquisition SLA interlanguage Selinker critical period Lenneberg
ZG_3_14 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_14 — Register, Style, and Genre: Variation Across Social Contexts

Every competent language user commands a range of styles or registers — varieties of language associated with particular situations, purposes, and audiences. A doctor does not speak to patients the same way she speaks to

register style genre formality Halliday field
O_3_07 Earth Anomalies

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

coral paleoclimate Porites Sr/Ca δ¹⁸O sea surface temperature PAGES 2k
ZD_5_11 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_5_11 — Version Control: Git, Distributed VCS, and Collaborative Software Development

Version control systems (VCS) are tools that track changes to files over time — enabling software developers (and increasingly writers, designers, scientists, and data analysts) to record the history of every modificatio

version control Git distributed VCS branching merging GitHub
H_1_10 Verified Suppression & Thesis

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

damnatio memoriae memory erasure unperson Soviet retouching photo manipulation Cultural Revolution
A_4_24 Verified Foundations

A_4_24 — Dhammapada: Verses of the Buddhist Path

The Dhammapada ("Verses of the Dharma/Teaching" or "Path of Dharma") is the most widely read and translated text of Theravada Buddhism — a collection of 423 verses in 26 chapters (vagga), presenting the core ethical and

Dhammapada Buddhist scripture Pali Canon Khuddaka Nikaya Theravada verses
U_3_10 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_3_10 — Printmaking and the History of the Book

Printmaking — the creation of images or text by transferring ink from a prepared surface to paper or other substrate — and the history of the book are intertwined stories of how humans multiplied information. Relief prin

printmaking woodcut engraving etching lithography book history
ZF_5_16 Verified Oceanography

ZF_5_16 — Ocean Observation Networks: Global Monitoring of the Marine Environment

Ocean observation networks constitute the global infrastructure for monitoring the physical, chemical, and biological state of the world's oceans in near-real-time. The centerpiece of modern ocean observation is the Argo

ocean observation Argo floats GOOS ocean monitoring satellite oceanography moored buoys
P_4_02 Philosophy & Meaning

P_4_02 — Perennial Philosophy and Universal Wisdom

The Perennial Philosophy — philosophia perennis — is the thesis that beneath the surface diversity of the world's religious and spiritual traditions lies a SINGLE, universal truth about the nature of reality and human ex

perennial philosophy philosophia perennis Huxley Leibniz Steuco mysticism
P_4_09 Philosophy & Meaning

P_4_09 — Non-Dualism — Advaita Vedanta, Taoism, and the Unity of Opposites

Non-dualism — the philosophical position that ultimate reality is not divided into fundamentally opposed categories (subject/object, mind/matter, self/other, good/evil) — appears independently across the world's deepest

non-dualism Advaita Vedanta Shankara Brahman Atman maya
M_5_08 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_5_08 — Elongated Skulls Expanded: Global Distribution and Genetics

Artificial cranial modification (ACM) — the deliberate reshaping of the infant skull through binding, boarding, or padding — is one of the most widespread and ancient cultural practices in human history, documented indep

elongated skulls cranial deformation artificial cranial modification Paracas ACM head binding
M_5_22 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_5_22 — Mesolithic Europe: Hunter-Gatherer Complexity Before Agriculture

The Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age, ~10,000–5000 BCE in Europe) — the period between the end of the last Ice Age and the arrival of farming — has been traditionally treated as a brief, uninteresting interlude between the d

mesolithic hunter-gatherer forager europe star carr lepenski vir
M_5_13 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_5_13 — Construction Replication Experiments: Testing Ancient Building Claims

Construction replication experiments — systematic attempts to reproduce ancient architectural and engineering achievements using period-appropriate tools and techniques — constitute a critical methodological approach wit

experimental archaeology construction replication pyramid building Stonehenge transport moai megalithic techniques
M_5_04 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_5_04 — Submerged Structures of the Mediterranean — Pavlopetri to Baiae

The Mediterranean Sea contains some of the world's best-documented and most archaeologically significant submerged settlements and structures — sites that were built on dry land and subsequently inundated by combinations

Pavlopetri Baiae submerged city underwater archaeology sea-level rise Mediterranean
M_3_15 Credible Forbidden Archaeology

M_3_15 — Construction Replication Experiments: Testing Ancient Building Methods

Construction replication experiments — attempts to reproduce ancient building techniques using only tools and methods available in the relevant period — provide the strongest empirical test of whether "impossible" ancien

construction-replication experimental-archaeology wally-wallington nova-obelisk pyramid-construction megalithic-transport
M_3_13 Credible Forbidden Archaeology

M_3_13 — Out-of-Place Artifacts Systematic Evaluation

Out-of-place artifacts (OOPArts) are objects found in archaeological contexts that appear anomalous — either too technologically advanced, too old, or too far from their expected geographic origin. This document systemat

ooparts out-of-place artifacts Antikythera mechanism Baghdad Battery Iron Pillar Lycurgus Cup
M_3_16 Credible Forbidden Archaeology

M_3_16 — Geopolymer & Ancient Concrete Hypothesis

The geopolymer hypothesis proposes that some ancient stone structures — particularly the Egyptian pyramids — were constructed not by cutting, transporting, and stacking quarried blocks, but by casting artificial stone in

geopolymer ancient concrete Joseph Davidovits pyramid construction cast stone limestone reconstitution