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.

1,241 results for "book of changes" — page 59 of 63

I_4_16 Credible UAP Disclosure

I_4_16 — UAP Economic Implications of Disclosure

The potential economic implications of UAP disclosure — the scenario in which governments formally acknowledge the existence of advanced technologies of unknown or non-human origin and either release or fail to contain k

UAP disclosure economics technology disruption energy sector defense industry
V_1_06 Mathematics & Information

V_1_06 — Mathematics of Music: Harmonic Ratios & Tuning Systems

The relationship between mathematics and music is among the oldest in intellectual history. Pythagoras (c. 570–495 BCE) is traditionally credited with discovering that consonant musical intervals correspond to simple num

music theory mathematics Pythagorean tuning harmonic ratios equal temperament Fourier analysis
V_4_13 Credible Mathematics & Information

V_4_13 — Mathematics of Voting: Arrow's Theorem, Fairness, and Electoral Systems

The mathematics of voting — a branch of social choice theory — applies rigorous mathematical analysis to the problem of aggregating individual preferences into collective decisions, revealing deep impossibility results t

voting theory social choice Arrow's theorem Condorcet paradox Gibbard-Satterthwaite electoral system
V_4_23 Verified Mathematics & Information

V_4_23 — Shannon Information Theory: Entropy, Communication, and the Mathematical Theory of Information

Claude Elwood Shannon (1916–2001) published "A Mathematical Theory of Communication" in the Bell System Technical Journal in July and October 1948, founding the field of information theory. Shannon defined information qu

claude shannon information theory entropy bit channel capacity coding theorem
V_3_09 Mathematics & Information

V_3_09 — Fourier Analysis: Signal Processing and the Mathematics of Frequency

Fourier analysis — the decomposition of functions into constituent sinusoidal waves — is one of the most transformative mathematical ideas in science and engineering. Joseph Fourier's 1822 insight that any periodic funct

Fourier analysis Fourier series Fourier transform FFT fast Fourier transform spectral analysis
V_3_03 Mathematics & Information

V_3_03 — Chaos Theory & Fractals: Mathematics of Complexity

Chaos theory — the mathematical study of systems that are deterministic yet unpredictable — represents one of the most profound discoveries of 20th-century mathematics. Edward Lorenz (1963) discovered that a simple syste

chaos theory fractals Lorenz Mandelbrot butterfly effect strange attractor
V_2_03 Mathematics & Information

V_2_03 — History of Algebra: Al-Khwarizmi to Group Theory

Algebra — the generalization of arithmetic to unknown quantities and their relationships — has a 4,000-year documented history, from Babylonian equation-solving tablets (c. 1800 BCE) through Brahmagupta's Indian treatise

algebra Al-Khwarizmi equation quadratic cubic Brahmagupta
M_0_00 Forbidden Archaeology

M_0_00 — Forbidden Archaeology: Section Summary

M_1_07 Credible Forbidden Archaeology

M_1_07 — Crystal Skulls Examination

Crystal skulls — life-sized or near-life-sized human skull models carved from clear or milky quartz crystal — have been among the most enduring icons of alternative archaeology since the late 19th century. Approximately

crystal skull quartz Mitchell-Hedges skull British Museum Smithsonian Eugène Boban
M_1_00 Forbidden Archaeology

M_1_00 — Anomalous Artifacts OOParts: Subfolder Summary

M_1_08 Credible Forbidden Archaeology

M_1_08 — Ica Stones and Acámbaro Figurines

The Ica stones and Acámbaro figurines are two separate collections of artifacts cited in forbidden archaeology and creationist literature as alleged evidence that humans coexisted with dinosaurs — a claim that contradict

Ica stones Acámbaro figurines dinosaur human coexistence Javier Cabrera Waldemar Julsrud
U_1_13 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_1_13 — Musical Notation: From Neumes to MIDI and Digital Scores

Musical notation — the technology of transcribing sound into visible marks — is one of humanity's most consequential inventions, enabling music to be preserved, transmitted, standardized, and composed in ways impossible

musical notation neumes staff notation tablature Guido d'Arezzo MIDI
X_1_15 Medicine & Healing

X_1_15 — Greek and Roman Medicine: Hippocrates, Galen, and Western Medical Foundations

Greek and Roman medicine constitutes the foundational tradition of Western medical science, spanning from the 5th century BCE to the 3rd century CE and dominating medical thought for over 1,500 years. Hippocrates of Kos

Hippocrates Galen Asclepius Asclepieia humorism four humors
Credible

INTERDOC_71 — The NDE Paradox: Consciousness Without Neural Activity & Substrate Independence

The near-death experience (NDE) paradox is the question of whether subjective phenomenology reported during cardiac arrest reflects (a) post-hoc reconstruction during recovery, (b) hidden residual neural activity not cap

near-death experience NDE AWARE study AWARE-II substrate independence bioelectricity
W_4_04 World Civilizations

W_4_04 — Mississippian Culture — Cahokia, Mound Builders, and the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex

Cahokia, located near present-day East St. Louis, Illinois, was the largest pre-Columbian settlement north of Mexico, reaching a peak population of 20,000 or more around 1050-1200 CE. The site features Monks Mound — the

Cahokia Mississippian culture mound builders Monks Mound Southeastern Ceremonial Complex SECC
W_4_02 World Civilizations

W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui

The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of

Polynesia Polynesian navigation star compass wayfinding Rapa Nui Easter Island
W_4_00 World Civilizations

W_4_00 — Americas Pacific Indigenous: Subfolder Summary

W_1_05 World Civilizations

W_1_05 — Phoenician Civilization — Alphabet, Navigation, and the Purple Empire

The Phoenicians — coastal Canaanites inhabiting a narrow strip of the eastern Mediterranean (modern Lebanon, plus parts of Syria and Israel) — never built a military empire but achieved something arguably more consequent

Phoenicia Phoenician alphabet Tyre Sidon Byblos
W_1_04 World Civilizations

W_1_04 — Persian Civilization — Achaemenid Empire, Magi, and Cosmic Kingship

The Persian Empire (550–330 BCE under the Achaemenids, revived 224–651 CE under the Sassanids) created the largest empire the ancient world had seen — stretching from Libya to India, governing ~44% of the world's populat

Persian Empire Achaemenid Magi Persepolis Cyrus Cylinder Darius
W_1_00 World Civilizations

W_1_00 — Ancient Near East Mediterranean: Subfolder Summary