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.

3,050 results for "hi no tama" — page 70 of 153

U_1_17 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_1_17 — Electronic and Experimental Music: Technology, Avant-Garde, and Sonic Innovation

Electronic and experimental music — music that extends or breaks conventional assumptions about sound, composition, performance, and technology — represents one of the most radical artistic developments of the 20th and 2

electronic music experimental music musique concrète Stockhausen Cage Moog
U_1_09 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_1_09 — Sound Art and Experimental Music

Sound art — art that uses sound as its primary medium, often in spatial installations or environmental contexts — and experimental music — music that challenges conventional assumptions about composition, performance, in

sound art experimental music noise John Cage 4'33" musique concrète
U_1_10 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_1_10 — Theatre History: From Greek Tragedy to Global Performance

Theatre — the live performance of dramatic narrative by actors before an audience — is among the oldest and most enduring human art forms, arising independently in multiple civilizations and undergoing continuous reinven

theatre drama tragedy comedy Greek theatre Dionysus
U_1_06 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_1_06 — Folk Music and Ethnomusicology

Folk music broadly refers to traditional music transmitted orally within communities, typically without known individual composers, evolving through collective performance practice. Ethnomusicology is the academic study

folk music ethnomusicology traditional music oral tradition field recording Alan Lomax
U_5_24 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_5_24 — Totemism: Animal Ancestors, Sacred Kinship, and Species Identity

Totemism is a system of belief and social organization in which human groups maintain spiritual, ancestral, or kinship relationships with natural species, objects, or phenomena (the "totem"). First documented systematica

totemism totem animal ancestor clan identity lévi-strauss durkheim
U_5_21 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_5_21 — Upper Paleolithic Art: Cave Painting, Portable Art, and Symbolic Cognition

Upper Paleolithic art — spanning approximately 45,000 to 10,000 years ago — represents the earliest unambiguous evidence of complex symbolic cognition in Homo sapiens. The corpus includes parietal (cave wall) art at over

upper paleolithic cave art lascaux chauvet altamira cave painting
U_5_27 Verified Art, Music & Culture

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

mnemonic memory palace method of loci oral tradition art of memory Simonides
U_5_31 Verified Art, Music & Culture

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

Chauvet Cave paleolithic art cave painting Aurignacian Ardèche prehistoric art
U_5_30 Credible Art, Music & Culture

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

venus figurines paleolithic art venus of willendorf fertility symbol mother goddess upper paleolithic
U_2_05 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_2_05 — Photography and Visual Culture

Photography — from Greek phōs (light) + graphē (drawing) — transforms light into permanent images. Origins: the camera obscura (darkened chamber projecting inverted images through a pinhole) was known to Aristotle and us

photography visual culture daguerreotype camera obscura photojournalism documentary photography
U_4_09 Art, Music & Culture

U_4_09 — Poetry & Verse as Knowledge Vessel

Poetry — structured, rhythmic, and densely composed language — served as humanity's primary technology of knowledge preservation for millennia before widespread literacy.

poetry oral tradition epic verse meter Gilgamesh Homer
U_4_01 Art, Music & Culture

U_4_01 — Sacred Dance — Ritual Movement from Shamanism to Sufi Whirling

Sacred dance represents one of humanity's oldest and most widespread forms of religious expression, predating written language and formal theology. From the Sufi sema (whirling ceremony) of the Mevlevi order to the Lakot

sacred dance Sufi whirling sema Bharatanatyam Sun Dance shamanic dance
U_4_06 Art, Music & Culture

U_4_06 — Architecture as Sacred Art — Cathedrals, Mosques, Temples

Sacred architecture represents humanity's most ambitious attempt to materialize the divine in built form — encoding theological doctrines, cosmological models, mathematical principles, and ritual programs into stone, woo

sacred architecture cathedral mosque temple Chartres Hagia Sophia
X_2_15 Medicine & Healing

X_2_15 — Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Therapy

Regenerative medicine — defined as "the process of replacing, engineering, or regenerating human or animal cells, tissues, or organs to restore or establish normal function" — is among the most rapidly advancing frontier

regenerative medicine stem cells iPSC induced pluripotent stem cells embryonic stem cells mesenchymal stem cells
X_5_30 Verified Medicine & Healing

X_5_30 — Heart Rate Variability: Autonomic Function, Stress, and Integrative Health

Heart rate variability (HRV) — the variation in time intervals between consecutive heartbeats — is a non-invasive biomarker of autonomic nervous system (ANS) function that has emerged as one of the most widely studied ph

heart rate variability HRV autonomic nervous system vagal tone sympathovagal balance parasympathetic
X_3_06 Verified Medicine & Healing

X_3_06 — Radiology and Medical Imaging

Medical imaging — the visualization of internal body structures for diagnosis and treatment — has transformed medicine from a discipline dependent on external observation and invasive exploration to one with extraordinar

radiology X-ray Röntgen CT scan MRI ultrasound
Verified

INTERDOC_70 — Ancient Knowledge as Encoded Discovery of Biophysically Significant Parameters

The standard framing pits ancient wisdom against modern science, as if they are competing epistemologies. The evidence across ID1, ID2, and ID4 demolishes this framing by showing that the same biophysically significant p

ancient knowledge biophysical parameters sacred geometry acoustic tuning frequency-following response mechanotransduction
W_4_14 Credible World Civilizations

W_4_14 — Inca Empire: Tawantinsuyu, Quipu, and Vertical Archipelago

Tawantinsuyu ("The Four Parts Together") — the Inca Empire — was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America and the largest empire in the Southern Hemisphere, stretching ~4,000 km along the Andes from modern Colombia to

Inca Tawantinsuyu Cusco quipu khipu Machu Picchu
W_1_08 World Civilizations

W_1_08 — Anatolian Mother Goddess — Çatalhöyük, Cybele, and Pre-Classical Worship

- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)

Çatalhöyük Cybele Magna Mater Anatolian mother goddess Neolithic
W_1_19 Credible World Civilizations

W_1_19 — Hanseatic League: Medieval Trade Networks and Urban Power

The Hanseatic League (die Hanse) — a confederation of merchant guilds and market towns in northwestern and central Europe — dominated Baltic and North Sea trade from the mid-12th through the mid-17th century, at its peak

hanseatic-league hanse medieval-trade kontor lubeck bergen