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.
2,695 results for "de natura deorum" — page 56 of 135
U_3_18 — Ancient Metallurgy and Material Innovation
Ancient metallurgy — the extraction, alloying, and shaping of metals from raw ores — was among the most transformative technological achievements of human civilization, enabling new tools, weapons, agricultural implement
U_3_12 — Tapestry: Bayeux, Unicorn, and Narrative Textile Art
Tapestry — a form of textile art produced by weaving colored weft threads through plain warp threads on a loom, creating pictorial or decorative designs — is one of the most labor-intensive, expensive, and prestigious ar
U_3_07 — Paper and Papermaking Traditions
Paper — a matted sheet of plant fibers — is one of civilization's most transformative inventions, enabling the preservation and dissemination of knowledge at scales impossible with earlier writing surfaces. Pre-paper wri
U_3_13 — Art Restoration and Conservation: Science Meets Aesthetics
Art restoration and conservation — the practice of preserving, stabilizing, and (sometimes controversially) restoring works of art — sits at the intersection of science, aesthetics, ethics, and cultural politics. Every a
U_3_05 — Fashion and Costume History
Fashion — from Latin factio (making, doing) — encompasses clothing, accessories, and bodily presentation as systems of social communication, aesthetic expression, and cultural identity. Archaeological evidence: the oldes
U_5_11 — Censorship in Art: Suppression of Creative Expression Through History
Censorship of art — the suppression, alteration, or prohibition of creative works by political, religious, or social authorities — is as old as civilization itself and has taken forms from the destruction of physical obj
U_5_10 — Architecture as Cultural Expression: Sacred and Civic Space
Architecture — the design and construction of buildings and spatial environments — is simultaneously a practical art (shelter, function, structure) and a profound form of cultural expression, embodying a society's cosmol
U_5_14 — Indigenous Australian Art: Dot Painting, Bark Art, and Songlines
Indigenous Australian art constitutes the world's longest continuous artistic tradition — spanning at least 65,000 years from the earliest rock art and engravings to contemporary paintings that sell for six-figure sums i
U_5_04 — Comics, Graphic Novels, and Sequential Art
Sequential art — narrative through sequences of images, often combined with text — is one of humanity's oldest communication forms. Precursors: Egyptian tomb paintings with sequential narrative panels; Trajan's Column (R
U_5_27 — Mnemonic Systems Across Cultures: Memory as Engineered Technology
Mnemonic systems are deliberately engineered cultural technologies for storing, retrieving, and transmitting knowledge across generations without writing. The peer-reviewed cognitive psychology literature confirms that t
U_5_22 — Cultural Heritage: Preservation, Repatriation, and Living Traditions
Cultural heritage encompasses the tangible and intangible expressions of human civilization — monuments, artifacts, languages, rituals, oral traditions, traditional knowledge systems — that communities identify as inheri
U_5_31 — Chauvet Cave: Paleolithic Art and the Origins of Human Visual Expression
The Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc Cave (Grotte Chauvet), discovered on December 18, 1994, by speleologists Jean-Marie Chauvet, Éliette Brunel, and Christian Hillaire in the Ardèche gorge of southern France, contains some of the old
U_5_15 — Public Monuments and Memorials: Memory, Power, and Iconoclasm
Public monuments and memorials are among the most politically charged forms of art — objects placed in shared civic space to shape collective memory, assert values, and project power. From the ancient world's triumphal a
U_5_07 — Art Therapy and Healing Through Art
Art therapy — the clinical use of art-making within a therapeutic relationship to improve psychological well-being — and the broader phenomenon of healing through creative expression bridge the domains of art, psychology
U_5_28 — Hierophany: Sacred Manifestation in Architecture, Landscape, and Ritual
Hierophany — a term coined by Mircea Eliade in The Sacred and the Profane (1957) — denotes any manifestation of the sacred in ordinary reality: a stone, a tree, a building, a moment of light. Unlike theophany (appearance
U_5_30 — Venus Figurines: Paleolithic Art, Fertility Symbolism, and the Female Form
Venus figurines — small statuettes of the female form, typically emphasizing breasts, abdomen, hips, and vulva while minimizing faces, arms, and feet — constitute one of the most widespread and enigmatic art traditions o
U_5_05 — Children's Literature and Fairy Tales
Children's literature and fairy tales — stories told to, about, or for children, ranging from ancient oral folk narratives to modern picture books and young adult novels — constitute one of the most culturally pervasive
U_5_18 — Fractals in Art, Music & Mathematical Aesthetics
Fractal geometry is deeply woven into the fabric of human aesthetic experience across cultures and millennia — not as ornament, but as structure. Richard Taylor (University of Oregon) discovered in 1999 that Jackson Poll
U_2_22 — Shamanic & Entoptic Art
The neuropsychological model of shamanic art proposes that much of humanity's oldest visual art — from Upper Paleolithic cave paintings in Europe to San Bushman rock art in southern Africa to Aboriginal art in Australia
U_2_03 — Pottery & Ceramics as Cultural Record
Pottery is the most abundant artifact category in archaeological sites worldwide — more pottery sherds have been excavated than any other class of human-made object — making ceramics the foundation of archaeological chro
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