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.
1,293 results for "Pyramids of Egypt" — page 39 of 65
H_3_01 — Indigenous Knowledge Suppression — Colonialism and Epistemicide
Epistemicide — the systematic destruction of rival knowledge systems — is arguably the most devastating and least acknowledged consequence of global colonialism. Between 1492 and 1950, European colonial powers destroyed,
H_4_14 — The Smithsonian Controversy — Giant Claims and Institutional Response
The claim that the Smithsonian Institution has systematically suppressed evidence of giant human skeletons — allegedly found in 19th-century mound excavations across the American Midwest and East — is one of the most per
H_4_13 — Tobacco Science — How Industries Manufactured Doubt
The tobacco industry's half-century campaign to deny the health effects of smoking (c. 1953–2006) is the most thoroughly documented case of corporate science manipulation in history — and the template from which virtuall
H_4_04 — Soviet Science Suppression — Lysenkoism and Vavilov
The Lysenko affair (1928–1964) represents the most devastating case of ideological suppression of science in the 20th century. Trofim Denisovich Lysenko (1898–1976), an agronomist with minimal formal training, rose to do
H_4_15 — Classification and Declassification — How Governments Control Knowledge
The classification system — the legal and bureaucratic apparatus by which governments designate information as secret and restrict its dissemination — is one of the most powerful mechanisms of knowledge control in the mo
H_4_07 — History of Archaeology: From Antiquarianism to Modern Science
Archaeology as a discipline evolved from Renaissance-era antiquarian curiosity through Enlightenment collecting into a rigorous, methodologically grounded science. Key turning points include Thomsen's Three-Age System (1
H_4_09 — Whistleblower Persecution and Institutional Retaliation
Throughout history, individuals who expose institutional wrongdoing — government illegality, corporate fraud, scientific misconduct, military atrocities — have faced severe retaliation despite acting in the public intere
H_4_03 — Demonization Timeline
This document traces the single most important transformation in the history of mythology: the 2,500-year process by which the serpent/dragon went from the most POSITIVE universal symbol to the most NEGATIVE. Before appr
H_4_11 — Classified Science and Declassified Programs
Governments routinely classify scientific and technical research on national security grounds, creating vast bodies of knowledge that are inaccessible to the public, the scientific community, and democratic oversight for
P_3_15 — Nietzsche: Eternal Recurrence, Will to Power, and the Übermensch
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900) was a German philosopher, classical philologist, and cultural critic whose radical questioning of morality, religion, truth, and human meaning has made him one of the most influent
P_3_10 — Skepticism and Pyrrhonism
Skepticism — the philosophical position that knowledge is uncertain, limited, or impossible — is one of the oldest and most persistent currents in philosophy. Ancient Pyrrhonian skepticism (Pyrrho, ~360–270 BCE; Sextus E
P_3_12 — Medieval Philosophy: Aquinas, Ockham, and Scholastic Thought
Medieval philosophy spans roughly a millennium of intellectual activity (c. 5th-15th centuries CE) dominated by the project of integrating faith and reason — reconciling the philosophical heritage of ancient Greece (espe
P_3_08 — Pragmatism — American Philosophy
Pragmatism is the most distinctive American contribution to philosophy, originating in the 1870s with Charles Sanders Peirce (1839–1914), developed by William James (1842–1910), and extended by John Dewey (1859–1952). It
P_3_06 — Plato — Forms, Cosmology, and the Philosophical Tradition
Plato (428/427–348/347 BCE) is the foundational figure of Western philosophy, whose dialogues established the frameworks for metaphysics (Theory of Forms), epistemology (knowledge as recollection), political philosophy (
P_3_09 — Nihilism, Absurdism, and Camus
Nihilism — from Latin nihil ("nothing") — is the philosophical position that life, existence, and values lack objective meaning, purpose, or intrinsic worth. It is not a single doctrine but a cluster of related positions
P_3_21 — Decolonial Philosophy
Decolonial philosophy (or decoloniality) is a critical intellectual tradition originating primarily from Latin American scholars that analyzes the enduring structures of coloniality — the patterns of power, knowledge, an
P_4_13 — Chinese Philosophy — Dao, Confucius, and Beyond
Chinese philosophy encompasses one of the world's richest and longest-continuous intellectual traditions, spanning from the Zhou dynasty (~1046–256 BCE) to the present. The foundational period — the Hundred Schools of Th
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
P_4_05 — Stoicism — Ancient Resilience Philosophy Applied to Modern Existence
Stoicism — founded by Zeno of Citium circa 300 BCE and developed over five centuries by thinkers ranging from freed slaves to Roman emperors — is one of history's most practically influential philosophical systems. Its c
P_4_08 — Ubuntu and African Philosophical Traditions
African philosophy encompasses a rich and diverse family of intellectual traditions far too often overlooked in global philosophical discourse. Ubuntu — "I am because we are" (umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu) — is the most wide
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