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.
3,721 results for "i ching" — page 39 of 187
C_5_34 — Greek Religion: Gods, Ritual, and the Sacred in Ancient Greece
Greek religion was not a unified creed but a diverse ecology of practices, beliefs, and institutions that varied by polis, period, and social context. At its core was polytheistic ritual practice — animal sacrifice, liba
C_5_35 — Tibetan Buddhism: Vajrayana Tradition, Tantra, and Contemplative Science
Tibetan Buddhism — the Vajrayana ("Diamond Vehicle") tradition that developed in Tibet from the 7th century CE onward — represents one of the most elaborate systems of contemplative practice, philosophical analysis, and
C_5_04 — Zoroastrianism: The Demonization Pivot
Zoroastrianism (c. 1500–1000 BCE) introduced strict cosmic dualism — the absolute opposition of good (Ahura Mazda) and evil (Angra Mainyu/Ahriman) — and in doing so transformed serpent/dragon figures from ambiguous or po
C_5_20 — Seasonal Ritual Cycles: Solstice, Equinox, and Agricultural Festivals
Seasonal ritual cycles — religious festivals, agricultural ceremonies, and sacred observances tied to the solstices, equinoxes, and the transitional points between them — represent humanity's oldest continuous relationsh
C_5_24 — Sacred Kingship: Divine Rulers Across Civilizations
Sacred kingship — the institution by which a ruler derives authority not from popular consent or military power alone but from a divine mandate, descent, or identity — is one of the most pervasive political-religious str
C_5_23 — Threshold Guardian: The Universal Gatekeeper Archetype
The Threshold Guardian — a supernatural figure stationed at the boundary between profane and sacred space, between the known world and the unknown, between life and death — is one of the most universal archetypes in worl
C_5_10 — Finnish/Kalevala Mythology and Finno-Ugric Traditions
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
C_5_30 — Star People Origins: Celestial Ancestry Myths Worldwide
Traditions of celestial ancestry — the belief that humanity, or a founding lineage, originated from or was taught by beings from specific stars or constellations — are found across dozens of cultures worldwide. The Dogon
C_5_18 — Sami Nordic Shamanic Traditions
The Sami (historically "Lapp," now considered pejorative) are the indigenous people of Sápmi, spanning northern Norway, Sweden, Finland, and the Kola Peninsula of Russia. Their shamanic tradition, centered on the noaidi
C_3_03 — Sacred Kingship and Divine Rulership
Almost every civilization in recorded history has believed that their rulers held power through a divine connection. This is not mere propaganda — it is one of the most universal patterns in human culture, emerging indep
C_3_01 — Global Flood Stories
Over 500 independent flood traditions exist worldwide, spanning Mesopotamian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Greek, Aboriginal, Mesoamerican, and dozens of other cultures. The oldest written accounts — the Sumerian Eridu Gene
C_3_05 — Aztec Cosmology and the Five Suns
Aztec (Mexica) cosmology describes the universe as having passed through four previous ages (Suns), each created and destroyed by different gods through catastrophic events — jaguars, wind, fire-rain, and flood. We live
C_3_14 — Central Asian Shamanic Traditions
Central Asian shamanism represents one of the oldest continuously practiced spiritual systems on Earth, with roots extending to at least the Neolithic period across the vast steppe, taiga, and mountain regions from the U
C_3_02 — Language Origins and the Tower of Babel
How did language begin? This is "the hardest problem in science" (Christiansen & Kirby 2003). The Linguistic Society of Paris banned all papers on language origins in 1866 because the topic produced more speculation than
C_3_15 — The Labyrinth as Ritual Pathway: From Minoan Crete to Modern Practice
The labyrinth is one of humanity's most enduring symbols, with examples spanning from Bronze Age Cretan coins (c. 1200 BCE) to Scandinavian stone labyrinths, medieval cathedral floor designs, and contemporary therapeutic
C_3_07 — Initiation Rites, Coming of Age, and Ritual Transformation
Initiation rites — structured rituals transforming an individual from one social/spiritual status to another — are among the most universal and ancient human cultural practices. Arnold van Gennep (1909) identified the th
C_3_11 — Sacred Sexuality, Hieros Gamos, and Fertility Cults
Sacred sexuality — the ritual enactment of sexual union as a cosmologically generative act — represents one of the most widespread and most misunderstood categories of ancient religious practice. The Sumerian hieros gamo
C_3_10 — Sacrifice and Offering Across Civilizations
Sacrifice — the ritual destruction or relinquishment of something valuable to establish, maintain, or restore a relationship with sacred powers — is arguably the most universal and foundational religious act in human his
C_3_09 — Sacred Pilgrimage Traditions Worldwide
Pilgrimage — the intentional journey to a sacred site for spiritual transformation — is one of the most universal religious practices in human history, documented across virtually every major world tradition and many Ind
C_3_08 — Death Rituals, Funerary Architecture, and the Technology of Dying
How a culture treats its dead reveals its deepest beliefs about what a human being is and what (if anything) lies beyond death. From the earliest known intentional burial (~100,000 BCE, Qafzeh Cave, Israel — ochre-staine
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