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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
141 results for "suppression" — page 7 of 8
H_3_11 — Provenance Research: Authentication, Repatriation, and Evidence Chains
Provenance research — the systematic investigation and documentation of an object's ownership history, findspot, chain of custody, and authentication — is the foundational discipline that determines whether an artifact i
H_3_10 — Museum Ethics — Who Owns the Past?
The question of who owns the past — and specifically, who has rightful custody of archaeological objects, cultural artifacts, and human remains — is the central ethical controversy in contemporary museum practice. The de
H_4_26 — Intellectual Property and Biopiracy: Patenting Traditional Knowledge
Biopiracy — the appropriation of traditional knowledge, biological resources, and genetic materials from indigenous and local communities by corporations, researchers, or governments, typically without adequate consent,
H_4_25 — Information Warfare and Historical Revisionism: Modern Threats
Information warfare — the strategic use of information (and misinformation) to achieve political, military, or economic objectives — has entered a new and qualitatively different phase in the digital era. While propagand
H_4_13 — Tobacco Science — How Industries Manufactured Doubt
The tobacco industry's half-century campaign to deny the health effects of smoking (c. 1953–2006) is the most thoroughly documented case of corporate science manipulation in history — and the template from which virtuall
H_4_17 — Algorithmic Censorship and AI Content Moderation
Algorithmic content moderation — the use of automated systems (machine learning classifiers, natural language processing, computer vision, and large language models) to detect, flag, restrict, or remove online content —
H_4_20 — Cargo Cult Science Extended: Feynman, Pseudoscience Boundaries
"Cargo cult science" — a term coined by Richard Feynman in his 1974 Caltech commencement address — describes research that mimics the surface appearance of science (data collection, statistical analysis, academic publica
H_4_27 — Open Access and Democratization of Knowledge: Breaking the Paywalls
The modern academic publishing system creates a paradox: publicly funded research — produced by researchers paid by taxpayers, conducted in publicly funded institutions, peer-reviewed by unpaid volunteer referees — is ov
H_4_15 — Classification and Declassification — How Governments Control Knowledge
The classification system — the legal and bureaucratic apparatus by which governments designate information as secret and restrict its dissemination — is one of the most powerful mechanisms of knowledge control in the mo
H_4_03 — Demonization Timeline
This document traces the single most important transformation in the history of mythology: the 2,500-year process by which the serpent/dragon went from the most POSITIVE universal symbol to the most NEGATIVE. Before appr
H_4_23 — State Secrets and Archaeological Blackouts: Restricted Sites
Across the world, archaeological sites, historical monuments, and culturally significant locations are partially or wholly restricted from scholarly access and public knowledge due to military occupation, government secr
H_4_19 — Translation Bias: How Translators Shape Ancient Meaning
Translation — the rendering of texts from one language into another — is never a neutral, transparent process. Every translation involves choices about how to handle ambiguity, cultural concepts with no direct equivalent
H_4_02 — Two Factions Dynamic
Across virtually every ancient civilization, a recurring narrative describes TWO factions among non-human or divine beings: one that wants humanity to have knowledge, power, and expanded consciousness — and one that want
H_4_01 — Propaganda, Information Control, and the Manufacture of Consent
The systematic manipulation of public belief is as old as civilization itself. Egyptian pharaohs chiseled out predecessors' names (damnatio memoriae), Roman emperors staged bread and circuses, and Chinese imperial histor
H_4_24 — Lost Technologies: Things Ancients Could Do That We Can't Replicate
Throughout history, civilizations developed technologies, materials, and techniques that were subsequently lost — and that modern science has struggled or failed to fully replicate. These "lost technologies" range from m
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
H_4_22 — Climate Science Denial: Manufactured Doubt Case Study
Climate science denial — the organized effort to cast doubt on the scientific consensus that human activity is driving dangerous global warming — represents one of the best-documented cases of manufactured doubt in moder
H_4_32 — Information Warfare, Propaganda & Manufactured Consent
Information warfare — the deliberate use of information and communication systems to gain strategic advantage — is as old as organized conflict, but the modern era has industrialized it. From Edward Bernays's founding of
H_4_11 — Classified Science and Declassified Programs
Governments routinely classify scientific and technical research on national security grounds, creating vast bodies of knowledge that are inaccessible to the public, the scientific community, and democratic oversight for
N_4_00 — Power Political Societies: Subfolder Summary
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