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.
466 results for "construction technology" — page 2 of 24
J_1_16 — Fire Piston: Ancient Pneumatic Ignition Technology
The fire piston (also called fire syringe) is a device that ignites tinder through the rapid compression of air in a sealed cylinder — a practical application of adiabatic compression heating that was independently inven
J_1_07 — Sacred Caves as Ritual Technology
This document examines Sacred Caves as Ritual Technology, a topic within the Ancient Technology research area. Key areas of investigation include Deep Time — The Archaeological Record, Chauvet Cave — Sophisticated from t
J_2_02 — Ancient Textiles — Weaving, Dyeing, and Fiber Technology
Ancient textile production represents one of humanity's oldest and most sophisticated technologies, with dyed flax fibers from Dzudzuana Cave (Georgia) dated to approximately 34,000 BP pushing the origins of fiber techno
J_2_18 — Ancient Textile Technology: Fibers, Looms, and Dyes
Textile production — spinning fiber into thread and weaving thread into cloth — is among the oldest and most consequential human technologies, predating pottery and metallurgy. [KEY FINDING] The oldest known textile frag
J_2_04 — Ancient Ceramics and Pottery Technology
Ceramics represent humanity's oldest synthetic material, with the earliest known fired-clay vessels — Jōmon pottery from Japan — dated to c. 16,500 BP (Odai Yamamoto site; Kuzmin, 2006), predating agriculture by thousand
J_5_15 — Sub-Saharan African Technology
Sub-Saharan Africa developed sophisticated technological traditions that have been systematically undervalued in global technology histories. The Haya people of northwestern Tanzania produced medium-carbon steel in prehe
J_4_07 — Ancient Chemical Technology and Preservation
Ancient civilizations developed a wide range of chemical technologies — processes that transform the composition of materials through heating, dissolution, fermentation, precipitation, and other reactions — millennia bef
J_4_13 — Ancient Fire Technology: Kilns, Furnaces, and Thermal Engineering
The controlled use of fire — humanity's foundational transformative technology — evolved from the earliest campfires (evidence of controlled fire use dates to at least 1 million years ago at Wonderwerk Cave, South Africa
INTERDOC_33 — Technology, Warfare, and the Ethical Thread
The relationship between technology and warfare is not merely that technology enables new weapons — it is that warfare drives technological development more consistently than any other human activity. The bronze sword (~
INTERDOC_61 — Hydrothermal Vent Chemistry: From Abiogenesis to Modern Energy Technology
Life originated at alkaline hydrothermal vents where serpentinization of olivine produced hydrogen, heat, and a natural pH gradient across porous iron-sulfur mineral membranes — structurally identical to the proton-motiv
G_4_26 — Consciousness-Technology Integration
The intersection of consciousness studies and technology represents one of the most consequential frontiers of 21st-century science and philosophy. Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), pioneered by researchers from Jacques
D_5_13 — Obsidian: Volcanic Glass in Technology, Trade, and Ritual
Obsidian — a naturally occurring volcanic glass formed when felsic lava cools rapidly with insufficient crystal growth — is one of the most important materials in human technological and cultural history. Prized for its
H_4_12 — Patent Suppression and Buried Technology
Patent suppression — the deliberate withholding, blocking, or acquisition-and-shelving of inventions through legal, corporate, or governmental mechanisms — is a documented phenomenon with both verified and mythologized d
P_3_19 — Heidegger: Being, Technology, and Dasein
Martin Heidegger (1889–1976), arguably the most influential and controversial philosopher of the 20th century, fundamentally reoriented Western philosophy by arguing that the tradition had "forgotten" the question of Bei
P_3_20 — Heidegger: Being and Time, Dasein & the Question of Technology
Martin Heidegger (1889–1976) is arguably the most influential and controversial philosopher of the 20th century. His masterwork Sein und Zeit (Being and Time, 1927) revolutionized continental philosophy by reframing the
P_1_10 — Philosophy of Technology
Philosophy of technology examines the nature, meaning, and ethical implications of technology — not merely as a collection of tools but as a fundamental mode of human existence that shapes perception, values, social rela
P_5_12 — Postmodernism: Derrida, Foucault, Lyotard, and Deconstruction
Postmodernism — a loose, contested, and internally diverse intellectual movement that emerged from French philosophy and literary theory in the 1960s-1980s — is characterized by a thoroughgoing skepticism toward universa
ZE_3_04 — Ethics of Technology and Surveillance
Surveillance ethics addresses the moral implications of monitoring individuals and populations through technological means and the tension between security and privacy. The field draws on a long philosophical lineage — J
S_4_10 — Space Elevators and Advanced Launch Technology
Space access remains the fundamental bottleneck for space development — current chemical rockets achieve orbit at $1,500–$5,000/kg to low Earth orbit (SpaceX Falcon 9, ~$2,700/kg; Starship aims for <$100/kg but is unprov
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
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