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.
2,115 results for "quantum to classical transition" — page 86 of 106
N_4_04 — P2 Lodge (Propaganda Due) and Political Secret Societies
Propaganda Due (P2) was a clandestine Masonic lodge in Italy that operated as a state-within-a-state from the 1960s through its exposure in 1981. Led by Licio Gelli — a former Fascist who became one of the most powerful
N_4_15 — Organized Crime Secret Structures — Yakuza, Triads, Mafia
The major transnational criminal organizations — the Sicilian Cosa Nostra and its American offshoot, the Calabrian 'Ndrangheta, the Neapolitan Camorra, the Japanese Yakuza (boryokudan), and the Chinese Triads — function
N_4_03 — Skull and Bones and Ivy League Secret Societies
Skull and Bones is a senior secret society at Yale University, founded in 1832 by William Huntington Russell and Alphonso Taft. It selects ("taps") 15 new members each year from the junior class, who then meet in a windo
R_4_01 — The Evolution of Flight: Birds, Bats, Insects, and Pterosaurs
Powered flight has evolved independently at least four times in the history of life — in insects (~350–400 Ma), pterosaurs (~230 Ma), birds (~160 Ma), and bats (~55 Ma) — making it one of evolution's most spectacular exa
R_4_05 — Seed Plants and Angiosperm Evolution
Angiosperms (flowering plants) are the most species-rich and ecologically dominant group of land plants, comprising roughly 300,000–400,000 species — over 90% of all living plant species. Their origin and rapid diversifi
R_4_04 — Skeletal Evolution and Bone
Skeletal systems — structures providing support, protection, and locomotion — evolved independently multiple times across the animal kingdom. The Cambrian Explosion (~540–520 Mya) witnessed the near-simultaneous appearan
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_07 — Venom Evolution and Biochemical Arms Races
Venom — a cocktail of bioactive molecules injected via a specialized delivery apparatus (fangs, stingers, harpoons, nematocysts, spurs) to subdue prey, deter predators, or aid in competition — has evolved independently o
R_4_15 — Insect Evolution: Flight, Metamorphosis, and Mega-Diversity
Insects (class Insecta) are the most species-rich group of organisms on Earth — with over 1 million described species and an estimated 5–10 million total, they account for approximately 80% of all known animal species. T
R_4_09 — Parasitism and Host-Parasite Coevolution
Parasitism — a symbiotic relationship in which one organism (the parasite) benefits at the expense of another (the host) — is arguably the most common lifestyle on Earth. By some estimates, over 40% of all described spec
R_4_13 — Evolution of Sleep: Why Organisms Rest
Sleep — a reversible state of reduced awareness, diminished responsiveness, and characteristic neural activity — is found across virtually all animals with a nervous system, from C. elegans (which exhibits a quiescent st
R_4_08 — Echolocation and the Evolution of Sensory Systems
The evolution of sensory systems represents some of the most striking convergent solutions to ecological challenges across the animal kingdom. Echolocation — the ability to emit sound pulses and interpret returning echoe
R_3_01 — Epigenetics and Ancestral Memory
Epigenetics — heritable changes in gene expression WITHOUT changes to the DNA sequence — has revolutionized biology over the past two decades. Your genes are the hardware; epigenetics is the software that determines whic
R_3_05 — Coevolution — Arms Races, Mutualisms, and Red Queens
Coevolution — reciprocal evolutionary change between interacting species — is one of the most powerful engines of biological diversity. Leigh Van Valen's Red Queen hypothesis (1973) captured its essence: species must con
R_3_14 — Evolution of Aging and Senescence
Aging — the progressive decline in physiological function and increase in mortality rate with time — is one of evolution's deepest puzzles: why would natural selection, which optimizes fitness, permit organisms to deteri
R_3_02 — Horizontal Gene Transfer in Complex Life
For decades, the "tree of life" was the central metaphor of evolutionary biology — species branching neatly from common ancestors through vertical gene transmission (parent to offspring). This metaphor is now BROKEN, at
R_3_06 — Altruism and Cooperation in Nature
Altruism — behavior that reduces the actor's fitness while increasing the recipient's — presents a fundamental puzzle for evolutionary theory: how can natural selection favor genes that reduce their bearer's reproduction
R_3_19 — Bacterial Chemotaxis and Signal Transduction
Bacterial chemotaxis — the ability of bacteria to sense chemical gradients in their environment and direct their movement accordingly — is one of the most thoroughly understood signal transduction systems in all of biolo
R_3_09 — Molecular Phylogenetics and Tree of Life
Molecular phylogenetics — reconstructing evolutionary relationships from DNA, RNA, and protein sequences — has revolutionized our understanding of the tree of life since Carl Woese's landmark 1977 discovery, using small-
R_3_15 — Epigenetics and Lamarckian Inheritance: Transgenerational Mechanisms Beyond DNA Sequence
Epigenetics — the study of heritable changes in gene expression that occur without alteration to the underlying DNA sequence — has fundamentally reshaped modern biology since the term was coined by Conrad Hal Waddington
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