RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
199 results for "sacred mountain" — page 4 of 10
B_5_19 — Mother Goddess Traditions: Fertility, Earth, and the Sacred Feminine
The veneration of a maternal or earth-associated female divine figure appears across virtually every documented human culture — from Paleolithic Venus figurines (c. 40,000 BCE) through Neolithic Çatalhöyük (c. 7500 BCE)
Y_1_05 — Soma and Haoma — The Sacred Plant of Vedic and Avestan Ritual
Soma (Sanskrit: sóma) is the most celebrated sacred substance in the Vedic corpus — a pressed plant juice ritually offered to the gods and consumed by priests, praised in all 114 hymns of Rig Veda Mandala IX plus ~6 addi
Y_1_02 — Ergot, Sacred Pharmacology, and History
This document examines Ergot, Sacred Pharmacology, and History, a topic within the Consciousness research area. Key areas of investigation include Claviceps purpurea — Biology and Chemistry, Ergot Alkaloids — The Chemist
H_1_12 — Iconoclasm — Systematic Destruction of Sacred Images
Iconoclasm — the deliberate destruction of religious images, statues, and sacred art — is one of the most recurrent and cross-cultural forms of knowledge suppression in human history. Far from random vandalism, iconoclas
P_5_18 — Comparative Religion & the Science of Sacred Traditions
Comparative religion — the systematic study of the world's religious traditions through cross-cultural analysis — emerged as an academic discipline in the 19th century with Friedrich Max Müller's translation of the Sacre
ZE_3_16 — Taboo Foods and Sacred Dietary Laws: Cosmology of Eating
No aspect of human life is more universally regulated by religion and culture than eating. Every known society has food taboos — categories of substances that are forbidden, restricted, or ritually controlled — and many
ZE_3_11 — Food Ethics — Agriculture, Animal Use, and Sacred Dietary Laws
Food ethics examines the moral dimensions of what we eat and how we produce it — spanning agricultural systems, animal use, sacred dietary laws, environmental impact, and distributive justice. Industrial animal agricultu
ZE_1_13 — Philosophy of Play, Games, and the Sacred Ludic
The philosophy of play examines one of humanity's most fundamental yet philosophically neglected activities. Johan Huizinga (Homo Ludens, 1938) argued that play is not merely one activity among others but the foundation
ZE_1_12 — Comparative Legal Philosophy — Sacred Law Across Cultures
Comparative legal philosophy examines how different civilizations ground law in sacred or metaphysical foundations, producing legal systems that differ fundamentally in their relationship between human legislation and tr
ZE_2_04 — Taboo, the Sacred, and Boundary Transgression
Taboo — the prohibition of certain acts, objects, or persons as dangerous, polluting, or sacred — is one of the most universal features of human culture, yet one of the most difficult to explain. From the Polynesian orig
ZE_2_03 — Ritual, Symbol, and the Sacred — Theory of Religious Experience
Ritual, symbol, and the experience of the sacred are universal features of human culture — present in every known society from the Upper Paleolithic to the present. This document examines the major theoretical frameworks
N_3_14 — Occult Finance: Templar Banking, Sacred Economy, and Hidden Wealth
The intersection of financial power and organizational secrecy has deep historical roots, from the Knights Templar banking system (c. 1150–1307 CE) — which pioneered letters of credit, deposit banking, and international
V_1_04 — Sacred Geometry — Mathematical Patterns in Ancient Design
Sacred geometry refers to the attribution of symbolic, cosmological, or divine meaning to geometric forms and mathematical ratios — a practice documented in ancient Egyptian, Greek, Islamic, Hindu, Buddhist, and medieval
M_5_09 — Denisova Cave: Archaeological Wonders and Genetic Revelations
Denisova Cave (Денисова пещера), located in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia, Russia, is one of the most extraordinary archaeological sites in the world — the only known location where three distinct hominin speci
A_4_22 — Puranas: Hindu Cosmological Encyclopedia
The Puranas (Purāṇa, "ancient, old") are a vast corpus of Hindu sacred literature comprising 18 Mahāpurāṇas ("Great Puranas") and 18 Upapurāṇas ("Secondary Puranas"), totaling hundreds of thousands of verses (the Skanda
U_1_23 — Aboriginal Songlines
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks, song cycles, or *yiri in some Aboriginal languages) are an ancient system of oral navigation, cultural law, and cosmological knowledge used by Aboriginal Australian peoples — repre
U_3_15 — Religious Iconography Systems: Visual Theology Across Civilizations
Religious iconography — the visual systems through which religious traditions communicate theological concepts, sacred narratives, ritual knowledge, and cosmological frameworks — is among the most vast and culturally com
INTERDOC_70 — Ancient Knowledge as Encoded Discovery of Biophysically Significant Parameters
The standard framing pits ancient wisdom against modern science, as if they are competing epistemologies. The evidence across ID1, ID2, and ID4 demolishes this framing by showing that the same biophysically significant p
W_3_22 — Mapungubwe Kingdom
Mapungubwe (c. 1075–1290 CE) was the first complex state society in southern Africa, located at the confluence of the Limpopo and Shashe rivers in present-day South Africa. The site demonstrated the earliest evidence of
C_4_19 — The Labyrinth as Ritual Pathway: From Knossos to Chartres
The labyrinth — a single-path (unicursal) design leading to a center and back — is one of humanity's most persistent geometric-symbolic forms, appearing across at least 4,000 years and five continents. Distinct from the
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields