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.
3,050 results for "hi no tama" — page 53 of 153
ZC_4_01 — Gift Economy and Reciprocity
The gift economy — a system of exchange in which goods and services are transferred without explicit agreement for immediate return, yet create bonds of obligation, reciprocity, and social hierarchy — has been one of the
ZC_4_03 — Ethnomusicology — Music as Social Phenomenon
Ethnomusicology — the study of music in its cultural context, or more precisely, the study of music as culture and culture as expressed through music — emerged in the mid-20th century from the older discipline of "compar
ZC_2_09 — Sociology of Gender and Sexuality
The sociology of gender and sexuality examines how societies construct, enforce, and contest gender categories and sexual norms. The sex-gender distinction (introduced to sociology by Ann Oakley, Sex, Gender and Society,
ZC_2_13 — Economic Sociology and Markets
Economic sociology examines how social structures, institutions, and cultural meanings shape economic life — rejecting the neoclassical assumption that markets operate according to purely rational, self-interested calcul
ZC_2_03 — Intergenerational & Collective Trauma
Intergenerational trauma refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to the next — a phenomenon observed across populations including Holocaust survivor families, Indigenous communities subjected
G_4_11 — Archaeoastronomy Methods and Systematic Evidence
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past civilizations understood, observed, and used astronomical phenomena — has matured from a field plagued by speculative alignment claims into a rigorous interdisciplinary discipline
G_4_01 — Modern Conspiracy Analysis
The modern reptilian conspiracy theory did not emerge from ancient tradition — it was manufactured through a specific chain of publications mixing fiction, theosophy, and selective ancient citation. Robert E. Howard's 19
G_1_12 — Geoarchaeology — Sediments, Soils, and Site Formation Processes
Geoarchaeology applies the principles and methods of earth sciences — geology, geomorphology, sedimentology, soil science, and geochemistry — to archaeological problems, focusing on the geological context of archaeologic
G_1_07 — Stable Isotope Analysis and Ancient Diets
Stable isotope analysis of human and animal remains — primarily the measurement of carbon ($\delta^{13}$C), nitrogen ($\delta^{15}$N), and sulfur ($\delta^{34}$S) isotope ratios in bone collagen, tooth enamel, hair kerat
G_1_20 — Dendrochronology, Luminescence & Advanced Dating Methods
Beyond radiocarbon dating, archaeology and geochronology rely on a suite of complementary dating methods, each with distinct strengths, limitations, and applicable time ranges. Dendrochronology (tree-ring dating), pionee
G_1_01 — Experimental Archaeology: Testing Ancient Technologies
Experimental archaeology is a sub-discipline that tests hypotheses about past technologies, construction methods, and subsistence strategies through physical replication and controlled experimentation. From Thor Heyerdah
G_3_02 — Simulation Theory
Simulation Theory proposes that our perceived reality is a computational simulation running on substrate beyond our direct observation. Bostrom's trilemma (2003) provides the logical scaffolding (Tier 1), quantization of
G_3_23 — Actor-Network Theory: Latour, Callon, and the Agency of Non-Humans
Actor-Network Theory (ANT) is a theoretical and methodological approach developed primarily by Bruno Latour (1947–2022), Michel Callon (born 1945), and John Law (born 1946) at the Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation (CS
G_3_15 — Piezoelectric Effects: Crystals, Geology, and Ancient Technology
Piezoelectricity (from Greek piezein, "to squeeze") is the physical phenomenon whereby certain crystalline materials generate an electric charge when subjected to mechanical stress, and conversely, deform mechanically wh
G_3_06 — Systems Collapse and Complexity Theory Applied to Civilizations
This document examines Systems Collapse and Complexity Theory Applied to Civilizations, a topic within the Modern Frameworks research area. Key areas of investigation include Tainter's Foundational Thesis, The Western Ro
G_3_14 — Simulation Argument — Philosophy, Physics, and Testability
The Simulation Argument — formally presented by philosopher Nick Bostrom (2003, Philosophical Quarterly) — is not the claim that we live in a computer simulation, but rather a trilemma: at least one of the following thre
G_3_12 — Morphic Resonance and Formative Causation
Morphic resonance is a hypothesis proposed by Rupert Sheldrake (1981, A New Science of Life) that posits the existence of morphic fields — non-local, non-energetic fields that carry information about the habits (forms an
G_3_16 — Complexity Theory and Civilizational Collapse
Complexity theory — drawn from physics, mathematics, ecology, and information theory — provides a powerful framework for understanding why civilizations collapse: not as the result of a single catastrophic event, but as
G_3_24 — Post-Normal Science: Funtowicz, Ravetz, and Uncertainty
Post-normal science (PNS) is a framework for understanding and managing scientific inquiry when facts are uncertain, values in dispute, stakes high, and decisions urgent — conditions that characterize many of the most cr
G_2_03 — Bayesian Reasoning and Archaeological Inference
Bayesian reasoning — the systematic updating of probabilities for hypotheses as new evidence is acquired — has transformed archaeology, chronology, and the evaluation of disputed historical claims since the 1990s. At its
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