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.
1,872 results for "Alexander the Great" — page 58 of 94
ZD_1_15 — Quantum Information Theory: Entanglement, Quantum Computing, and Information Bounds
Quantum information theory — the study of how information is encoded, processed, communicated, and protected using quantum mechanical systems — represents one of the most transformative intellectual developments at the i
ZD_1_16 — Quantum Information Theory
Quantum information theory — the study of how information is encoded, processed, and transmitted using quantum mechanical systems — has emerged as one of the most transformative research fields of the 21st century, unify
ZD_3_08 — Cybersecurity and Network Security
Cybersecurity — the protection of computer systems, networks, and data from unauthorized access, damage, or disruption — has grown from a technical niche into a critical domain affecting national security, economic stabi
ZD_5_08 — Computer Music: Algorithmic Composition, Digital Audio, and AI Music
Computer music encompasses the creation, analysis, processing, and performance of music using computers — spanning algorithmic composition (generating music through formal procedures and code), digital audio signal proce
ZD_4_11 — Social Network Analysis — Granovetter, Small Worlds, Influence
Social network analysis (SNA) — the study of social structures through the use of graph theory and network science, where individuals (or organizations, nations, etc.) are represented as nodes and their relationships (fr
ZD_2_08 — Penrose and Computation: Non-Computability, Consciousness, and Gödel's Theorem
Roger Penrose (b. 1931), Nobel laureate in physics (2020, for demonstrating that black hole formation is a robust prediction of general relativity), has advanced an influential and controversial argument that human mathe
L_1_11 — Convergent Genetic Evolution — Same Solutions, Different Lineages
Convergent evolution — the independent evolution of similar features in species from different evolutionary lineages — is one of the most powerful demonstrations of natural selection's predictability and one of the deepe
L_1_07 — Genetic Bottlenecks, Founder Effects, and Toba
Genetic bottlenecks — dramatic reductions in population size that slash genetic diversity — and founder effects — the reduced variation carried by small colonizing groups — have profoundly shaped the genomes of species f
L_1_08 — Denisovans — Archaic Hominin Deep Dive
Denisovans are an extinct group of archaic hominins identified primarily through ancient DNA analysis rather than traditional fossil morphology — making them history's first hominins to be discovered by genetics. In 2010
L_4_13 — Ancient DNA: Methods, Revelations, and Ethical Debates
Ancient DNA (aDNA) — genetic material recovered from biological remains thousands to hundreds of thousands of years old — has revolutionized our understanding of human evolution, migration, and population history. The fi
L_4_05 — Paleogenomics Methods and Ancient DNA
Paleogenomics — the study of ancient genomes — has transformed archaeology, anthropology, and evolutionary biology over the past two decades, recognized by the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded to Svante
L_4_04 — Ancient Proteomics and Paleoproteomics
Paleoproteomics — the recovery and analysis of ancient proteins from archaeological and paleontological specimens — has emerged as a revolutionary complement to ancient DNA (aDNA), dramatically extending the temporal and
L_4_06 — Epigenetics and Transgenerational Inheritance
Epigenetics — the study of heritable changes in gene expression that occur without alterations to the DNA sequence itself — has transformed modern biology by revealing a layer of regulatory information "above" the genome
L_4_03 — Genetic Clocks and Molecular Dating
The molecular clock — the concept that DNA and protein sequences accumulate mutations at approximately regular rates over time — provides a powerful tool for dating evolutionary divergences independently of the fossil re
L_4_17 — Transgenerational Epigenetic Trauma
Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of trauma — the hypothesis that severe stress, famine, or psychological trauma experienced by one generation can alter the epigenetic marks (DNA methylation, histone modifications
L_4_11 — Genetic Engineering in Ancient Mythology — Directed Modification Claims
Across virtually every major mythological tradition, human creation is depicted as a deliberate act of divine engineering — gods fashioning humans from raw materials (clay, blood, corn, breath, bone) through intentional,
L_2_02 — Population Genetics and Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
Population genetics — the mathematical study of allele frequency change in populations — provides the quantitative framework underlying evolutionary biology. The Hardy-Weinberg principle (1908), independently derived by
L_2_08 — East Asian Genetics and Population History
East Asia — comprising China, Japan, Korea, Mongolia, Taiwan, and mainland Southeast Asia — is home to the largest human population concentration on Earth and harbors a complex genetic history shaped by major north-south
L_2_07 — European Genetics and Three Ancestral Populations
The genetic history of Europe has been revolutionized by ancient DNA, revealing that most present-day Europeans can be modeled at a broad level as mixtures of three major ancestral components assembled over the past ~10,
L_2_04 — Oceanian Genetics and Pacific Migration
The human settlement of Oceania represents the last major expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe, and the most remarkable feat of maritime exploration in human history. It occurred in two major phases separated by ~4
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