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.
1,606 results for "tit for tat" — page 48 of 81
INTERDOC_20 — Psychedelic Neuroscience and Ancient Ritual Practice
[KEY FINDING] The Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research, the Imperial College Centre for Psychedelic Research (est. 2019, directed by Robin Carhart-Harris), and the MAPS (Multidisciplinary Assoc
INTERDOC_41 — NHI Hypotheses: Five Frameworks for Non-Human Intelligence
[KEY FINDING] The NHI question is not "Do they exist?" but "Which framework best explains the reported phenomena?" Five distinct hypotheses have been proposed, each with supporting evidence and critical weaknesses:
INTERDOC_47 — Islamic Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline of Knowledge Control By and Against the Muslim World
Suppression events in this timeline are categorized by mechanism: S-active (deliberate targeted action by an identifiable actor — book burnings, executions, physical destruction), S-structural (institutional gatekeeping
INTERDOC_49 — Buddhist Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline of Knowledge Control By and Against Buddhist Traditions
Buddhist suppression spans 2,200 years across three continents and at least six distinct persecutor categories: (1) Zoroastrian/Sasanian — the priest Kartir (3rd century CE) suppressed Buddhism, Manichaeism, and Christia
INTERDOC_13 — Out of Africa vs. Multiregional: The Synthesis That Changed Everything
The two dominant models of human origins battled from the 1980s through the 2010s. Chris Stringer and Peter Andrews championed the Recent African Origin (RAO) model (1988, Science): anatomically modern humans evolved exc
INTERDOC_18 — Volcanic Winter, the Bronze Age Collapse, and Civilizational Fragility
The Thera eruption (Santorini, ~1628 BCE or ~1530 BCE — dating remains contested) ejected an estimated 60 km³ of material — four times the volume of Krakatoa (1883). Ice core evidence from Greenland (GISP2) and tree-ring
Ancient_Engineering_Modern_Science
The application of modern scientific instruments and methods to ancient construction has produced a body of data that simultaneously confirms the ingenuity of ancient builders within known frameworks and identifies speci
INTERDOC_16 — Metallurgy, Alchemy, and the Chemistry Thread
The transformation of raw ore into metal was among humanity's most consequential discoveries. Copper smelting appeared by ~5500 BCE at sites like Belovode (Serbia) and Çatalhöyük (Anatolia). Bronze (copper-tin alloy) eme
Archaic_Knowledge_Continuity
This cross-section synthesis document traces how specific technical, cosmological, and medical knowledge traditions survived, transformed, or were independently rediscovered across major civilizational transitions. It ma
ZB_2_03 — Biomineralization and Biological Engineering
Biomineralization — the process by which living organisms produce minerals — represents one of the most sophisticated feats of biological engineering on Earth. From nacre (mother of pearl), whose alternating layers of ar
ZB_2_16 — Tardigrades: Biology of Indestructibility
Tardigrades (phylum Tardigrada, ~1,400 described species) — commonly called "water bears" or "moss piglets" — are microscopic invertebrates (0.1–1.5 mm) renowned for their extraordinary tolerance to environmental extreme
ZB_2_25 — Short-Chain Fatty Acids: Microbial Metabolites and Host Signaling
Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) — predominantly acetate (C2), propionate (C3), and butyrate (C4) — are the principal metabolites produced by anaerobic bacterial fermentation of dietary fiber in the mammalian colon, reach
ZB_2_21 — Horizontal Gene Transfer & Microbial Evolution
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) — also called lateral gene transfer (LGT) — is the transmission of genetic material between organisms by mechanisms other than parent-to-offspring (vertical) inheritance. HGT is the dominan
ZB_2_09 — Biological Regeneration: Limb Regrowth and Tissue Repair
The ability to regenerate lost body parts varies enormously across the animal kingdom. Planarian flatworms can rebuild an entire organism from a fragment 1/279th of the original. Salamanders regenerate complete limbs, ja
ZB_2_17 — Mycology: Kingdom Fungi
Kingdom Fungi — the second-largest kingdom of eukaryotes after animals, with an estimated 2.2–3.8 million species (only ~150,000 described) — encompasses organisms that obtain nutrition by absorbing dissolved organic mol
ZB_1_09 — Tool Use in Animals
Tool use — defined as the deployment of an external object to alter the form, position, or condition of another object or organism — was once considered uniquely human. Since Jane Goodall's 1960 observation of chimpanzee
ZB_1_17 — Cognitive Ecology and Animal Decision-Making
Cognitive ecology — the study of how animals' cognitive abilities (perception, learning, memory, decision-making) have been shaped by the ecological challenges they face — bridges behavioral ecology, comparative psycholo
ZB_1_11 — Predator-Prey Dynamics and Coevolution
Predator-prey dynamics are among the most fundamental processes structuring ecological communities, driving evolutionary arms races, and shaping biodiversity. The Lotka-Volterra equations (Lotka, 1925; Volterra, 1926) pr
ZB_1_13 — Sexual Selection and Mate Choice
Sexual selection — first articulated by Darwin (1871) in The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex — is the evolutionary process by which traits that increase mating success are favored, even when they decreas
ZB_5_14 — Conservation Biology
Conservation biology — the scientific study of biodiversity loss and the methods to protect species, habitats, and ecosystems — was formally established as a discipline by Michael Soulé (University of California, San Die
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