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.
2,371 results for "Temple of the Feathered Serpent" — page 88 of 119
Y_2_09 — Sleep Paralysis, Hypnagogia, and Liminal States
Sleep paralysis — a temporary inability to move or speak while falling asleep or waking — is one of the most universal and culturally interpreted altered states, experienced by an estimated 7.6% of the general population
Y_2_10 — Drowning and Near-Drowning: Aquatic Altered Consciousness
Drowning — defined by the WHO (2002, revised 2005) as "the process of experiencing respiratory impairment from submersion/immersion in liquid" — is one of the leading causes of accidental death worldwide (~236,000 deaths
Y_3_13 — Visionary Art: Depicting Altered States from Hildegard to Grey
Visionary art — artistic creation inspired by, depicting, or emerging from altered states of consciousness — spans the entire history of human image-making, from Paleolithic cave paintings (whose geometric patterns David
Y_3_02 — Meditation, Neuroplasticity, and Contemplative Neuroscience
Meditation — the systematic training of attention and awareness — has been practiced for at least 3,000-5,000 years (earliest evidence: Indus Valley seal of a seated figure in meditation posture, ~2600 BCE; earliest text
Y_3_16 — Vipassana: Insight Meditation Tradition
Vipassana (Pali: vipassanā, "clear seeing" or "insight") is one of the two primary modes of Buddhist meditation alongside samatha (calming/concentration), directed at cultivating direct experiential understanding of the
Y_3_10 — Fasting, Asceticism, and Altered Consciousness
Fasting and ascetic practices — deliberate deprivation of food, sleep, comfort, or sensory input — have been used across virtually all religious and spiritual traditions to induce altered states of consciousness, visions
Y_3_07 — Music, Consciousness, and Altered States
Music is one of the most powerful modulators of conscious experience available without pharmacological intervention. Neuroimaging reveals that music engages an extraordinarily distributed network: auditory cortex (superi
Y_3_17 — Breathwork Traditions: Pranayama, Holotropic Breathing, and Respiratory Consciousness
Breathwork — the intentional manipulation of breathing patterns to influence physiological, psychological, and (in traditional frameworks) spiritual states — encompasses ancient practices dating to the earliest recorded
Y_1_04 — Psychedelic Renaissance — Clinical Research and Consciousness
The psychedelic renaissance — a resurgence of rigorous scientific research on psychedelic substances after decades of prohibition — has produced some of the most significant findings in 21st-century psychiatry and consci
Y_1_12 — Salvia Divinorum: Mazatec Sage and Kappa-Opioid Visionary
Salvia divinorum ("diviner's sage") is a psychoactive plant of the mint family (Lamiaceae) native to the cloud forests of the Sierra Mazateca in Oaxaca, Mexico, where it has been used for centuries by Mazatec healers and
Y_1_17 — Ketamine Therapy and Dissociative Medicine
Ketamine — a dissociative anesthetic synthesized by Calvin Stevens at Parke-Davis in 1962 and first used clinically by Edward Domino and Guenter Corssen in 1966 — has emerged as a revolutionary treatment for treatment-re
Y_1_09 — Toxins, Venoms, and Altered States
Several animal toxins and plant poisons produce dramatic altered states of consciousness, and their use in ritual, medicine, and folklore constitutes a significant chapter in the relationship between humans and psychoact
Y_1_14 — Toad Venom: Bufo alvarius, 5-MeO-DMT, and Desert Sacrament
Toad venom — specifically the venom of the Sonoran Desert toad (Incilius alvarius, formerly Bufo alvarius) — contains 5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-MeO-DMT), one of the most potent psychoactive tryptamines known, p
Y_1_10 — Ibogaine: African Plant Medicine and Addiction Interruption
Ibogaine is a naturally occurring psychoactive indole alkaloid derived from the root bark of the West African shrub Tabernanthe iboga, which has been used for centuries in the Bwiti spiritual tradition of Gabon, Cameroon
H_2_10 — Archaeological Nationalism: Weaponizing the Past
Archaeological nationalism is the systematic appropriation of archaeological evidence, historical narratives, and cultural heritage to serve nationalist political agendas — constructing, validating, or legitimizing claim
H_2_08 — Textbook Bias and National History Narratives
History textbooks are among the most powerful instruments of national identity formation — and among the most systematically distorted sources of historical knowledge in any society. Every nation's textbooks tell a selec
H_2_19 — Forbidden Archaeology — Cremo & Thompson Claims
Forbidden Archeology: The Hidden History of the Human Race (1993, revised edition 1998, 914 pages), authored by Michael A. Cremo and Richard L. Thompson, is the most comprehensive compendium of anomalous archaeological a
H_2_07 — Radiocarbon Dating Controversies and Calibration Disputes
Radiocarbon dating — the measurement of the radioactive isotope ¹⁴C in organic materials to determine their age — is archaeology's single most important chronological tool, having revolutionized the discipline since Will
H_1_04 — Ancient Libraries — Destruction and Knowledge Loss
Throughout human history, major repositories of knowledge have been destroyed by fire, war, religious persecution, conquest, and deliberate suppression — resulting in incalculable losses to the accumulated learning of an
H_1_17 — COINTELPRO — FBI Domestic Surveillance
COINTELPRO (an acronym for COunter INTELligence PROgram) was a series of covert and illegal projects conducted by the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from 1956 to 1971, aimed at surveilling, infiltrat
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