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.
1,872 results for "Alexander the Great" — page 85 of 94
N_3_03 — Rosicrucian Manifestos and the Invisible College
The Rosicrucian manifestos — the Fama Fraternitatis (1614), Confessio Fraternitatis (1615), and The Chemical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreuz (1616) — are among the most enigmatic and consequential documents in the histor
N_4_02 — Money, Debt, and the Architecture of Power
Money is the most pervasive technology in human civilization — more people interact with monetary systems daily than with any other human invention. Yet the history of money reveals something counterintuitive: DEBT came
R_4_02 — Eye Evolution and the Origin of Vision
Eyes have evolved independently at least 40–65 times across the animal kingdom, producing a stunning diversity of optical designs — from simple eyespots in jellyfish to camera eyes in vertebrates and cephalopods, compoun
R_4_17 — Biogeography & the Wallace Line: Continental Drift, Island Life, and Distribution Puzzles
Biogeography — the study of the geographic distribution of organisms, both past and present — has been central to evolutionary biology since Alfred Russel Wallace (1823–1913) identified the sharp faunal boundary between
R_3_04 — Sexual Selection — Mate Choice and Evolutionary Aesthetics
Sexual selection, first articulated by Charles Darwin in The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871), explains traits that enhance mating success rather than survival — from the peacock's extravagant tail
R_3_13 — Evolution of the Immune System
The immune system is one of evolution's most elaborate and costly creations — vertebrate adaptive immunity alone employs V(D)J recombination to generate over 10¹¹ distinct antibody specificities from fewer than 400 gene
R_2_04 — Homo Floresiensis: The Hobbit Mystery
In 2003, a team of Australian and Indonesian archaeologists discovered a tiny, near-complete hominin skeleton in Liang Bua cave on the island of Flores, Indonesia. Designated Homo floresiensis (Brown et al. 2004, Nature)
R_2_09 — Self-Domestication Hypothesis — Did Humans Tame Themselves?
The human self-domestication hypothesis proposes that Homo sapiens underwent a domestication process analogous to that of dogs, livestock, and Belyaev's experimentally domesticated foxes — but without an external domesti
R_1_15 — The Chirality Problem: Why Life Uses Left-Handed Amino Acids
One of the deepest unsolved problems in the origin of life is homochirality — the fact that all known life on Earth uses almost exclusively L-amino acids (left-handed) for proteins and D-sugars (right-handed) for nucleic
S_4_07 — Autonomous Weapons Systems — AI, Lethal Autonomy, and the Future of Warfare
Autonomous weapons systems (AWS) represent one of the most consequential intersections of artificial intelligence and military technology. The trajectory from early automated defensive systems (Phalanx CIWS, 1980) throug
S_4_13 — Autonomous Vehicles: Self-Driving, LIDAR, and the Mobility Revolution
Autonomous vehicles (AVs) — automobiles, trucks, and shuttles that use sensors, artificial intelligence, and control systems to navigate without human intervention — represent one of the most anticipated (and overpromise
S_1_05 — Digital Archaeology — AI, LiDAR, Remote Sensing, and the Discovery Revolution
Digital technologies are revolutionizing archaeology at a pace unprecedented in the discipline's history. LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) surveys have revealed entire hidden urban landscapes beneath forest canopy — f
S_1_06 — Internet and Digital Civilization — From ARPANET to the Algorithmic Age
The internet — humanity's most transformative communication infrastructure — evolved from a U.S. military research network (ARPANET, 1969) through academic adoption, commercialization (1990s), and the World Wide Web (Ber
S_1_02 — The Singularity and Transhumanism
The Singularity hypothesis proposes that technological progress will reach a point — estimated by Ray Kurzweil at approximately 2045 — where artificial superintelligence triggers runaway growth, fundamentally and irrever
S_3_05 — Food Security, Agricultural Technology, and the Future of Feeding Humanity
Human civilization feeds 8+ billion people through an agricultural system built on the Green Revolution's high-yield crop varieties, synthetic fertilizers, and mechanization — achieving what Malthusian pessimists of the
S_5_02 — Surveillance Technology — Panopticism, Mass Surveillance, and the Architecture of Control
Surveillance technology has evolved from Bentham's architectural Panopticon concept (1787) through the analog era of telephone wiretapping and photographic surveillance to the digital panopticon of the 21st century — whe
S_2_05 — Longevity Research — The Science of Aging, Life Extension, and the Quest for Biological Immortality
Aging — the progressive decline in physiological function leading to increased vulnerability, disease, and death — has transitioned from an accepted inevitability to a legitimate target of biomedical intervention. The fi
F_1_22 — Peopling of the Americas: Routes & Chronology
The peopling of the Americas — when, how, and by whom the Western Hemisphere was first colonized by modern humans — is one of the most actively debated questions in archaeology, genetics, and paleoanthropology, with the
F_1_16 — Coastal Migration Hypothesis: Kelp Highway and Pacific Rim
The coastal migration hypothesis (also known as the "Kelp Highway" hypothesis) proposes that the initial human colonization of the Americas occurred not via the traditional ice-free corridor through the interior of North
F_1_19 — Irish Monks in America: The Brendan Voyage and Pre-Columbian North Atlantic Contacts
The hypothesis that Irish monks reached Iceland, the Faroe Islands, and possibly North America before the Norse has a foundation in medieval literary, place-name, and archaeological evidence, though the most ambitious cl
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