RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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 40 of 187

C_2_12 Global Traditions

C_2_12 — Kukulkan / Quetzalcoatl — The Feathered Serpent Deep Dive

The Feathered Serpent is the most important and enduring deity/symbol complex in Mesoamerican civilization — spanning over 2,000 years (from Olmec iconography ~1200 BCE through the Spanish Conquest in 1521 CE) and appear

Kukulkan Quetzalcoatl feathered serpent plumed serpent Maya Aztec
C_2_14 Verified Global Traditions

C_2_14 — Rainbow Serpent Across Cultures: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis

The Rainbow Serpent is arguably the most geographically widespread and temporally deep mythological motif in human culture, appearing as a primordial water/creation deity across Australian Aboriginal traditions (where ro

Rainbow Serpent Dreamtime Ngalyod Ungud Dan Danbala
C_2_08 Global Traditions

C_2_08 — Venus / Morning Star Traditions

Venus, the brightest object in the sky after the Sun and Moon, plays a central role in myths across every major civilization. The Sumerians identified Inanna as the planet Venus, whose descent to and return from the unde

Venus morning star evening star Inanna Ishtar Lucifer
C_2_07 Global Traditions

C_2_07 — Prometheus / Forbidden Knowledge Archetype

The Promethean archetype encodes one of the most persistent patterns in world mythology: a single being defies the ruling divine authority to transfer forbidden knowledge, fire, or technology to humanity — and is severel

Prometheus forbidden knowledge fire theft Azazel Enki serpent of Eden
C_2_05 Global Traditions

C_2_05 — India Naga Traditions (Comprehensive Dossier)

This document examines India Naga Traditions (Comprehensive Dossier), a topic within the Global Traditions research area. The analysis spans topics including ** Naga, Nāga, Shesha, Vasuki, Takshaka. Notable findings incl

Naga Nāga Shesha Vasuki Takshaka Manasa
C_2_06 Global Traditions

C_2_06 — Chinese Dragon Mythology & Ancient Scriptures (Research Dossier)

This document examines Chinese Dragon Mythology & Ancient Scriptures (Research Dossier), a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Dragon as water/weather regulator, Dragon as

Chinese dragon long/loong longwang Dragon King Shan Hai Jing Huainanzi
C_2_15 Credible Global Traditions

C_2_15 — The Serpent as Initiation Guide: Cross-Cultural Analysis

Across radically diverse cultures, the serpent functions not merely as a symbol but as an initiatory agent — a being whose encounter marks the boundary between ordinary consciousness and transformed understanding. This p

serpent-initiation kundalini caduceus ouroboros nagas quetzalcoatl
C_2_03 Global Traditions

C_2_03 — Viracocha & South American Knowledge-Givers

Across the ancient Americas — from the Andes to Mesoamerica to the Colombian highlands and Brazilian coasts — a recurring figure appears: a bearded, non-local teacher who arrives from afar, brings the foundations of civi

Viracocha Quetzalcoatl Kukulkan Q'uq'umatz Bochica Sumé
C_2_09 Global Traditions

C_2_09 — Dogon / Nommo Comprehensive

This document examines Dogon / Nommo Comprehensive, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Geography and Demographics, Marcel Griaule and the Ethnographic Record, Ogotemmêl

Dogon Nommo Sirius Sirius B po tolo Marcel Griaule
C_2_01 Global Traditions

C_2_01 — World Religions & Serpent/Reptilian Connections

Serpent and reptilian beings appear across every major world religion — Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Gnosticism, Zoroastrianism, Egyptian tradition, Chinese cosmology, Japanese mythology, Mesoamerica

serpent religion Hinduism Buddhism Christianity Islam
C_2_02 Global Traditions

C_2_02 — The Flood-Serpent Connection

Across 14 major flood traditions — Sumerian, Babylonian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Maya, Aboriginal, Greek, Norse, and others — a consistent dual-force structure emerges: a sky/authority deity destroys, while a serpent/w

flood serpent Enki Ziusudra nachash YHWH
C_2_16 Credible Global Traditions

C_2_16 — Mesoamerican Mythology Beyond Maya and Aztec

Mesoamerican mythology is overwhelmingly studied through the lens of the Maya and Aztec/Mexica — the two civilizations with the most extensive surviving textual and iconographic records. Yet Mesoamerica was a mosaic of d

Mesoamerica Zapotec Mixtec Olmec Tarascans Purepecha
C_2_13 Global Traditions

C_2_13 — Fuxi and Nüwa — Chinese Serpent-Bodied Creator Deities

Fuxi (伏羲) and Nüwa (女媧) are the primordial creator deities of Chinese mythology — typically depicted with human upper bodies and intertwined serpent tails, representing the foundational pair from whom all humanity descen

Fuxi Nüwa Fu Xi Nu Wa 伏羲 女媧
C_2_04 Global Traditions

C_2_04 — Indonesian Naga & Southeast Asian Serpent Traditions

Southeast Asia possesses one of the densest concentrations of living naga/serpent traditions on Earth. From the cosmic serpent Antaboga of Java to the naga fireballs of the Mekong, from the naga princesses of Khmer dynas

Naga Indonesia Antaboga Batak Padoha Cambodia
C_2_11 Global Traditions

C_2_11 — Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive

This document examines Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Etymology and Core Identity, Olmec Origins — The Earliest Evid

Quetzalcoatl feathered serpent Kukulkan Gucumatz Ehecatl Olmec
ZF_2_09 Verified Oceanography

ZF_2_09 — Fisheries Science and Overfishing

Fisheries science studies the dynamics of fish populations and the management of their exploitation, while overfishing — harvesting fish faster than they can reproduce — has emerged as one of the most pressing threats to

fisheries overfishing maximum sustainable yield bycatch fish stock trawling
ZF_2_13 Verified Oceanography

ZF_2_13 — Marine Invertebrate Diversity — Cnidarians, Echinoderms, Mollusks

Marine invertebrates — animals without backbones — constitute the vast majority of animal diversity in the ocean: of ~230,000 described marine animal species, approximately 195,000 (85%) are invertebrates, spanning more

marine invertebrate cnidaria echinoderm mollusk coral jellyfish
ZF_2_01 Oceanography

ZF_2_01 — Deep-Sea Ecosystems: Hydrothermal Vents and Abyssal Biology

The deep ocean — defined as waters below 200 m, encompassing 95% of the ocean's volume and Earth's largest biome — remained virtually unexplored until the mid-20th century. The 1977 discovery of hydrothermal vent ecosyst

hydrothermal vent black smoker white smoker chemosynthesis extremophile tube worm
ZF_2_16 Credible Oceanography

ZF_2_16 — Mesopelagic Twilight Zone Ecology

The mesopelagic zone (200–1,000 m depth) — the ocean's "twilight zone" — is the largest and least understood habitat on Earth, containing an estimated 1–10 billion tonnes of fish biomass, hosting the largest animal migra

mesopelagic zone twilight zone biological carbon pump diel vertical migration myctophidae bioluminescence
ZF_2_12 Verified Oceanography

ZF_2_12 — Deep-Sea Gigantism and Abyssal Ecology

Deep-sea gigantism (also called abyssal gigantism) is the observed tendency for certain deep-sea invertebrates and some vertebrates to attain body sizes far exceeding those of their shallow-water relatives — a pattern do

deep-sea gigantism abyssal ecology giant squid giant isopod Bathynomus deep-sea fish