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.
3,721 results for "i ching" — page 88 of 187
G_4_13 — HADD and Agency Detection — Why We See Beings Everywhere
The Hyperactive Agency Detection Device (HADD) — a term coined by cognitive scientist Justin Barrett (2000) building on work by Stewart Guthrie (1993) and Pascal Boyer (2001) — refers to the proposed cognitive mechanism
G_4_26 — Consciousness-Technology Integration
The intersection of consciousness studies and technology represents one of the most consequential frontiers of 21st-century science and philosophy. Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), pioneered by researchers from Jacques
G_4_04 — Cognitive Science of Religion and the Anthropology of Belief
The Cognitive Science of Religion (CSR) is an interdisciplinary field that explains religious belief and practice as natural products of evolved cognitive mechanisms rather than supernatural revelation or cultural invent
G_4_19 — Oral Tradition as Historical Record — Scientific Assessment
Oral tradition — the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, narratives, law, and custom without writing — was the primary medium of human memory for >95% of our species' existence and remains vital in many living c
G_4_11 — Archaeoastronomy Methods and Systematic Evidence
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past civilizations understood, observed, and used astronomical phenomena — has matured from a field plagued by speculative alignment claims into a rigorous interdisciplinary discipline
G_4_09 — Bioarchaeology and Forensic Anthropology: Reading the Dead
Bioarchaeology—the study of human remains from archaeological contexts—transforms skeletons from anonymous objects into biographical records of individual lives. Through stable isotope analysis of bone and tooth enamel,
G_4_08 — Graham Hancock — Data-Driven Evaluation of Claims
Graham Hancock (b. 1950, Edinburgh) is a British journalist and author who has become the most prominent advocate of the "lost civilization" hypothesis — the idea that an advanced civilization existed before the end of t
G_4_05 — Biomimicry — Ancient and Modern Learning from Nature
Biomimicry—the practice of designing technologies, materials, and systems inspired by biological organisms and natural processes—represents one of the most productive intersections of science, engineering, and ecology. F
G_4_14 — Replication Crisis and What It Means for Ancient Claims
The replication crisis refers to the discovery, beginning in the early 2010s, that a substantial proportion of findings published in peer-reviewed scientific journals — particularly in psychology, social science, and bio
G_4_15 — Acoustic Archaeology — How Ancient Spaces Were Designed for Sound
Acoustic archaeology (archaeoacoustics) is the scientific study of how ancient built environments and natural spaces shaped sound and how sound was used in ritual, communication, and performance in the past. The field co
G_4_17 — Microbiome Archaeology — Ancient Gut and Soil Microbes
Microbiome archaeology — the extraction and analysis of ancient microbial communities from archaeological materials (dental calculus, coprolites, mummified remains, soil sediments, ceramics) — has emerged since ~2012 as
G_4_10 — Paleoclimatology Methods: Proxies, Models, and Reconstruction
Paleoclimatology reconstructs Earth's climate history using natural archives—physical, chemical, and biological proxies preserved in geological and biological materials. Speleothems (cave formations) record precipitation
G_4_01 — Modern Conspiracy Analysis
The modern reptilian conspiracy theory did not emerge from ancient tradition — it was manufactured through a specific chain of publications mixing fiction, theosophy, and selective ancient citation. Robert E. Howard's 19
G_4_12 — Citizen Science and Open-Source Research
Citizen science — the systematic involvement of non-professional volunteers in scientific research through data collection, classification, analysis, or distributed computation — has emerged as a powerful modern framewor
G_1_05 — eDNA and Environmental DNA — Reading Invisible Life
Environmental DNA (eDNA) refers to genetic material shed by organisms into their environment — through skin cells, mucus, feces, urine, gametes, decomposing tissue, pollen, root exudates, and other biological residues —
G_1_04 — Isotope Analysis and Provenance Studies
Isotope analysis — the measurement of ratios of stable or radiogenic isotopes preserved in human bone, tooth enamel, animal remains, ceramics, metals, and organic residues — has become one of the most powerful tools in m
G_1_10 — Photogrammetry and 3D Scanning in Heritage Documentation
Photogrammetry and 3D scanning technologies have transformed archaeological and heritage documentation from two-dimensional plans and photographs into millimeter-accurate, three-dimensional digital records of sites, arti
G_1_03 — Remote Sensing Satellite Archaeology and Geophysics
Remote sensing and geophysical survey — the use of satellite imagery, airborne sensors, and ground-based electromagnetic instruments to detect buried or hidden archaeological features without excavation — has become one
G_1_02 — Digital Archaeology: LiDAR, Remote Sensing, GIS, and AI in Discovery
Digital archaeology encompasses a suite of non-invasive and computational technologies that have revolutionised how sites are discovered, documented, and interpreted. Airborne LiDAR has revealed entire cities beneath tro
G_1_13 — Use-Wear Analysis and Residue Studies — Reading Ancient Tools
Use-wear analysis (also called traceology or microwear analysis) and residue studies are complementary methodologies that determine how ancient tools were used — what materials they processed, what motions were involved,
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