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.

374 results for "Natural History" — page 7 of 19

B_5_06 Beings & Entities

B_5_06 — Deification of Natural Phenomena: Thunder, Earthquakes, Disease as Entities

Across virtually every documented human culture, natural phenomena — storms, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, epidemics, drought — have been personified as intentional agents: gods, demons, or spirits with desires, emoti

agency detection HADD hyperactive agency detection device animism personification storm gods
ZD_1_12 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_1_12 — Information Geometry and Fisher Information

Information geometry is the mathematical field that applies differential geometry — the mathematics of curved spaces, manifolds, metrics, and connections — to the study of probability distributions and statistical models

information geometry Fisher information statistical manifold Riemannian geometry metric tensor natural gradient
ZD_1_05 Information & Computation

ZD_1_05 — Computational Complexity: P vs NP and the Limits of Efficient Computation

Computational complexity theory classifies problems not by whether they can be solved, but by how efficiently they can be solved — and its central open question, P vs NP, is one of the seven Clay Millennium Prize Problem

computational complexity P vs NP NP-completeness complexity classes polynomial time Turing machines
ZD_3_09 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_3_09 — History of the Internet — From ARPANET to the Decentralized Web

The Internet — the global network of interconnected computer networks using standardized protocols to exchange data — is the most transformative communication technology since the printing press, connecting over 5 billio

internet ARPANET TCP/IP World Wide Web HTTP HTML
ZD_2_10 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_2_10 — Speech Recognition and Synthesis: From Acoustic Models to Neural Voice Generation

Speech recognition (Automatic Speech Recognition — ASR) and speech synthesis (Text-to-Speech — TTS) are complementary technologies that bridge human spoken language and machine processing. ASR converts spoken audio into

speech recognition ASR text-to-speech TTS voice assistant Whisper
L_1_11 Verified Genetics & Origins

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

convergent evolution parallel evolution molecular convergence homoplasy adaptation natural selection
L_4_16 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_4_16 — Ancient Pathogen Genomics: Disease DNA from the Archaeological Record

Ancient pathogen genomics — the recovery and analysis of microbial DNA from archaeological remains — has revolutionized understanding of historical pandemics and pathogen evolution. The field was transformed when Johanne

ancient-pathogen-genomics yersinia-pestis mycobacterium-tuberculosis paleomicrobiology ancient-dna pandemic-history
L_4_09 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_4_09 — Selective Sweeps and Positive Selection in Humans

A selective sweep occurs when a beneficial allele rises rapidly in frequency under positive natural selection, carrying nearby linked variants along with it (genetic hitchhiking) and reducing genetic variation across the

selective sweep positive selection natural selection allele frequency hitchhiking extended haplotype homozygosity
L_2_02 Genetics & Origins

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

population genetics Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium allele frequency genetic drift natural selection migration
L_2_08 Verified Genetics & Origins

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

East Asian genetics Chinese population Japanese genetics Korean genetics Han Chinese Jomon
L_2_03 Genetics & Origins

L_2_03 — Ancient African Genetics

Africa harbors the greatest human genetic diversity on Earth — a direct consequence of being the continent of human origin, where populations have accumulated genetic variation for ~300,000+ years. Modern African populat

African genetics ancient African DNA African population history Bantu expansion Khoisan genetics deep population structure
L_2_09 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_2_09 — Genetic History of the Americas: Clovis to Contact

The genetic history of the Americas — from the initial peopling of the New World to the devastating population collapse after European contact — is one of the most intensively studied and rapidly evolving areas of paleog

Americas Native American Beringia Clovis pre-Clovis Anzick
Y_1_08 Verified Altered States

Y_1_08 — Cannabis: History, Ethnobotany, and Pharmacology

Cannabis (Cannabis sativa L.) is one of humanity's oldest cultivated plants, with a relationship spanning at least 12,000 years based on archaeological evidence. Its use as fiber (hemp), food (seeds), medicine, and psych

cannabis marijuana hemp THC CBD endocannabinoid system
H_2_10 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_2_10 — Archaeological Nationalism: Weaponizing the Past

Archaeological nationalism is the systematic appropriation of archaeological evidence, historical narratives, and cultural heritage to serve nationalist political agendas — constructing, validating, or legitimizing claim

archaeological nationalism weaponizing history political archaeology cultural heritage Kossinna national identity
H_4_07 Suppression & Thesis

H_4_07 — History of Archaeology: From Antiquarianism to Modern Science

Archaeology as a discipline evolved from Renaissance-era antiquarian curiosity through Enlightenment collecting into a rigorous, methodologically grounded science. Key turning points include Thomsen's Three-Age System (1

archaeology antiquarianism Three-Age System processual archaeology post-processual stratigraphy
H_4_18 Credible Suppression & Thesis

H_4_18 — Forbidden History: How Civilizations Erase Predecessors

A recurring pattern across human history is the systematic erasure, suppression, or appropriation of predecessor cultures by their successors — a phenomenon that operates through multiple mechanisms: physical destruction

cultural memory damnatio memoriae erasure predecessor usurpation cultural appropriation
P_5_10 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_10 — Philosophy of Religion: Faith, Reason, and Mystical Experience

The philosophy of religion is the branch of philosophy that critically examines the concepts, arguments, and experiences at the heart of religious belief and practice — not from within any particular faith tradition but

philosophy of religion theism atheism faith and reason cosmological argument ontological argument
P_5_18 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_18 — Comparative Religion & the Science of Sacred Traditions

Comparative religion — the systematic study of the world's religious traditions through cross-cultural analysis — emerged as an academic discipline in the 19th century with Friedrich Max Müller's translation of the Sacre

comparative religion history of religions Mircea Eliade Joseph Campbell phenomenology of religion sacred and profane
P_2_12 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_2_12 — Meta-Ethics: Moral Realism, Emotivism, and Constructivism

Meta-ethics is the branch of moral philosophy that asks foundational questions not about what is right or wrong (that is normative ethics) but about the nature, status, and foundations of moral claims themselves: Do mora

meta-ethics moral realism moral anti-realism emotivism expressivism constructivism
P_2_17 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_2_17 — Philosophy of Law: Jurisprudence and Legal Theory

Jurisprudence — the philosophical study of law's nature, authority, and relationship to morality — addresses foundational questions: What makes a rule a "law"? Is law necessarily connected to morality? How should judges

jurisprudence legal-positivism natural-law hartian dworkinian critical-legal-studies