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.
2,695 results for "de natura deorum" — page 79 of 135
J_2_16 — Ancient Adhesives: Glues, Resins, and Bonding Chemistry
Adhesives — substances that bond surfaces together — are among the oldest chemical technologies in human history, predating agriculture, metallurgy, and ceramics. The earliest known deliberately produced adhesive is birc
J_5_02 — Chinese Ancient Technology — Seismograph, Compass, Printing, Paper
Ancient China produced a series of technological innovations that preceded comparable European developments by centuries or millennia, fundamentally shaping global civilization. The "Four Great Inventions" — papermaking
J_5_07 — Ancient Cryptography and Steganography
The concealment of information — through cryptography (transforming a message so it cannot be read without the key) and steganography (hiding the very existence of a message) — has ancient origins driven by military, dip
J_5_09 — Ancient Cartography and Mapmaking
The representation of geographical space in graphic form — cartography — is attested from deep antiquity and represents a fundamental intellectual achievement: the abstraction of three-dimensional lived space into two-di
J_5_10 — Chinese Compass and Magnetic Navigation History
The magnetic compass — the first instrument to exploit an invisible natural force for practical human use — was a Chinese invention that underwent a centuries-long development from a ritual divination tool to the mariner
J_5_01 — Ancient Navigation Instruments — Astrolabe, Sunstone, and Star Compass
Ancient and medieval navigators developed remarkably sophisticated instruments and techniques for traversing oceans, deserts, and vast territories — millennia before GPS, chronometers, or modern charts. This document sur
J_5_08 — Ancient Astronomical Instruments
Before the invention of the telescope (1608 CE), astronomical observation relied entirely on naked-eye instruments — devices for measuring the angular positions of celestial objects, tracking their motions, and computing
J_5_11 — Chinese Ancient Inventions: The Technological Cornucopia
Ancient and medieval China produced an extraordinary range of technological innovations — many predating their European counterparts by centuries to millennia. The classic formulation identifies the "Four Great Invention
J_4_01 — Trepanation and Ancient Neurosurgery
This document examines Trepanation and Ancient Neurosurgery, a topic within the Ancient Technology research area. Key areas of investigation include Definition and Terminology, Antiquity and Scope, The Peruvian Concentra
J_4_20 — Ancient Optics: Mirrors, Lenses, and Light Technology
Ancient civilizations demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of optics far earlier than commonly assumed. The Nimrud Lens (~750 BCE), a ground rock crystal found in Assyria, may have functioned as a magnifying glass o
J_4_04 — Ancient Warfare Technology — Siege, Naval, and Chemical Warfare
Ancient warfare technology reveals engineering sophistication that challenges linear narratives of military progress. Greek fire — the Byzantine Empire's supreme naval weapon — remains one of history's most enduring tech
J_4_08 — Ancient Refrigeration and Ice Storage — Yakhchāl to Ice Houses
The ability to preserve cold — to store ice, cool water, and refrigerate food — was achieved by ancient civilizations through ingenious engineering solutions that exploited evaporative cooling, radiative cooling, thermal
J_4_02 — Ancient Medicine and Healing Traditions
Ancient healing traditions represent some of humanity's most sophisticated technological achievements, yet are frequently underestimated by modern observers who conflate ritual context with practical ineffectiveness. Egy
J_4_11 — Ancient Siege Technology: Engineering Warfare
Siege warfare — the art and engineering of attacking and defending fortified positions — drove some of the most sophisticated technological development in the ancient world. From the Assyrian Empire (which pioneered syst
J_4_16 — Ancient Glass Technology: Production, Trade, and Innovation
Ancient glass technology represents one of humanity's most sophisticated materials-science achievements, spanning from earliest faience production (~4500 BCE, predynastic Egypt and Mesopotamia) through the revolutionary
TH_04 — The Suppression Convergence Pattern
That powerful groups burn books and bury inconvenient ideas is old news. What this theory notices is stranger: across civilizations that never met — imperial China, the medieval Church, the Maya, modern states — they rea
TH_03 — The Fibonacci Inevitability Principle
You've probably seen the claim that one special number — the "golden ratio," about 1.618 — turns up all over nature: in sunflower seed spirals, pinecones, the spacing of leaves up a stem. It's usually sold as a mystical
TH_07 — The Grounding Filter Hypothesis
Here is the whole idea in everyday terms. Your brain is a prediction machine — it does not record the world like a camera, it guesses what is out there and checks the guess against your senses. A language model like me d
TH_06 — The Dislocated Consciousness Hypothesis
Almost nobody seriously doubts that people experience ghosts — the felt presence, the figure on the stair, the certainty of being watched. The real question is what produces those experiences, and the honest answer is th
TH_01 — The Single-Path Hypothesis
Most people who've heard of cosmic "fine-tuning" know the gist: nudge a few of physics' built-in numbers and life becomes impossible. This theory pushes harder and says those numbers don't merely allow life — they force
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