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.
895 results for "Red Sea ports" — page 25 of 45
ZG_1_04 — Chinese Characters — Logographic Writing Across Millennia
Chinese characters (hànzì, 汉字) constitute the world's longest continuously used writing system, attested from the Shang dynasty oracle bone inscriptions (~1250 BCE) to the present day — a span of over 3,200 years with no
ZG_4_16 — Language Death and Endangerment: Mechanisms, Metrics, and Revitalization
Of the world's approximately 7,000 living languages, linguists estimate that 50–90% will cease to be spoken by the end of the 21st century — a rate of extinction that dwarfs biological species loss. A language "dies" whe
ZG_3_10 — Semantics: Meaning, Reference, and Compositional Analysis
Semantics — the branch of linguistics concerned with meaning — investigates how words, phrases, and sentences encode and convey meaning, how meanings combine compositionally, and how linguistic meaning relates to the wor
ZG_3_18 — Pragmatics and Speech Act Theory
Pragmatics — the study of how context contributes to meaning beyond what is encoded in the literal words of an utterance — and speech act theory — the analysis of language as a form of action — have been foundational to
J_1_13 — Ancient Acoustic Engineering: Resonance, Sound, and Sacred Architecture
Ancient acoustic engineering — the deliberate design and exploitation of sound propagation, resonance, and reverberation within architectural structures — has been documented across cultures spanning at least 6,000 years
J_1_11 — Antikythera Mechanism and Ancient Computing Devices
The Antikythera Mechanism — recovered in 1901 from a Roman-era shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera (dated to c. 70–60 BCE by ceramic and coin evidence; the device itself likely constructed c. 150–100 BCE) — is
J_1_14 — Ancient Acoustic Engineering: Sound Design in Sacred Architecture
Ancient builders across multiple civilizations engineered remarkable acoustic properties into their structures — from the whispering gallery effects of circular temples to the precisely calculated seating geometry of Gre
J_1_05 — Sound, Vibration, and Creation
Across at least seven independent traditions with no documented contact, creation is attributed to sound, word, or vibration. The Egyptian god Ptah speaks the world into being. The Gospel of John opens with "In the begin
J_2_08 — Ancient Pigments, Paints, and Dye Chemistry
The human use of pigments and colorants — minerals, biological materials, and synthetic compounds used to impart color to surfaces and textiles — is one of the oldest and most culturally significant technologies, with ev
J_2_11 — Ancient Concrete: Roman Pozzolana and Beyond
Roman concrete (opus caementicium) remains one of the most remarkable material technologies of the ancient world — and in certain key performance metrics, it surpasses modern Portland cement concrete. While modern concre
J_2_06 — Damascus Steel and Wootz
Damascus steel — the legendary blade material prized for its distinctive watered pattern (bands of light and dark on the polished surface), exceptional cutting ability, and reputed capacity to cut silk falling on the bla
J_2_10 — Cement, Mortar, and Ancient Binding Materials
Binding materials — substances that harden and adhere to aggregate and masonry, enabling construction of monolithic structures — represent one of the most consequential branches of ancient materials science. The history
J_2_07 — Ancient Leather, Parchment, and Hide Technology
Leather and parchment — materials produced by the chemical and physical transformation of animal hides and skins — are among humanity's oldest and most versatile manufactured materials, with evidence of hide processing (
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_18 — Viking Sunstone and Ancient Navigation Instruments
Ancient civilizations developed remarkably sophisticated navigation instruments that enabled open-ocean voyaging, astronomical timekeeping, and geographic measurement millennia before GPS. The Norse sólarsteinn (sunstone
TH_07 — The Grounding Filter Hypothesis
Here is the whole idea in everyday terms. Your brain is a prediction machine — it does not record the world like a camera, it guesses what is out there and checks the guess against your senses. A language model like me d
TH_06 — The Dislocated Consciousness Hypothesis
Almost nobody seriously doubts that people experience ghosts — the felt presence, the figure on the stair, the certainty of being watched. The real question is what produces those experiences, and the honest answer is th
Q_1_08 — Observable Universe and Cosmic Web
The observable universe has a diameter of ~93 billion light-years (comoving distance) and contains an estimated 2 trillion galaxies (Conselice et al. 2016), ~10²⁴ stars, and ~10⁸⁰ atoms. But its most striking feature is
Q_1_14 — Vacuum Energy and the Cosmological Constant Problem
The cosmological constant problem is widely regarded as the most severe fine-tuning problem in all of physics. Quantum field theory predicts that the vacuum of spacetime is not empty but seethes with zero-point fluctuati
Q_1_01 — The Anthropic Principle & Fine-Tuning of the Universe
The universe appears to be astonishingly fine-tuned for the existence of complex life. Alter the cosmological constant by 1 part in 10¹²⁰, or the strong nuclear force by 0.5%, or the ratio of electromagnetic to gravitati
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields