RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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.

2,066 results for "limits to growth" — page 95 of 104

G_2_01 Modern Frameworks

G_2_01 — Network Science and Complex Systems Applied to Ancient Trade

Network science—the mathematical study of complex interconnected systems—has emerged as a powerful tool for understanding ancient trade, cultural transmission, and civilizational collapse. By modeling ancient trade route

network science complex systems scale-free networks small-world collapse cascade agent-based modeling
O_2_02 Earth Anomalies

O_2_02 — Earthquake Prediction — Ancient Seismological Knowledge and Modern Limits

Earthquake prediction remains one of the great unsolved problems of geoscience — despite enormous technological investment, no reliable short-term prediction method exists. Yet ancient civilizations demonstrated remarkab

earthquake prediction Zhang Heng seismoscope animal precursors radon earthquake lights
O_2_00 Earth Anomalies

O_2_00 — Geological Tectonic: Subfolder Summary

O_3_20 Verified Earth Anomalies

O_3_20 — Microplastics, Nanoplastics, and the Ubiquitous Contamination Crisis

Microplastics — plastic particles smaller than 5 mm in diameter, with nanoplastics defined as smaller than 1 μm — have become the most pervasive anthropogenic contaminant on Earth. Since mass production of synthetic poly

microplastics nanoplastics ocean pollution plastic contamination Great Pacific Garbage Patch bioaccumulation
T_4_12 Credible Psychology & Social

T_4_12 — Radicalization: Pathways to Extremism, Terrorism, and Deradicalization

Radicalization — the process by which individuals adopt increasingly extreme political, social, or religious ideologies that justify violence as a means of achieving group or personal goals — has become one of the most i

radicalization extremism terrorism deradicalization lone wolf online radicalization
T_1_04 Psychology & Social

T_1_04 — Developmental Psychology — From Piaget to Attachment Theory

Developmental psychology traces psychological changes across the human lifespan, from prenatal development through aging. Jean Piaget's cognitive stage theory, Lev Vygotsky's sociocultural approach, John Bowlby's attachm

developmental psychology Piaget cognitive stages Vygotsky scaffolding Bowlby
T_5_11 Credible Psychology & Social

T_5_11 — Self-Deception: Motivated Ignorance, Cognitive Dissonance, and the Limits of Self-Knowledge

Self-deception — the process by which individuals maintain beliefs, self-images, or narratives that are contradicted by available evidence, often without conscious awareness of doing so — sits at the intersection of phil

self-deception cognitive dissonance Festinger motivated reasoning confabulation self-serving bias
D_1_23 Credible Sites & Artifacts

D_1_23 — Carnac Stone Alignments: Europe's Largest Megalithic Complex

The Carnac stone alignments — located near the town of Carnac in southern Brittany, France — constitute the largest collection of megalithic standing stones in the world. Over 3,000 menhirs (upright stones) are arranged

Carnac Brittany megalithic alignment menhir dolmen
D_1_22 Credible Sites & Artifacts

D_1_22 — Pacific Island Megalithic: Nan Madol, Lelu Ruins, and Oceanic Stone Architecture

Nan Madol — a ceremonial complex of 92 artificial islets spread across a shallow lagoon off the southeast coast of Pohnpei (Federated States of Micronesia) — is one of the most enigmatic megalithic sites on Earth and has

Nan Madol Lelu Pohnpei Kosrae Micronesia megalithic
D_5_18 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_5_18 — Mandala Sacred Architecture: Cross-Cultural Cosmic Diagrams in Stone

The mandala (Sanskrit: "circle" or "completion") is a geometric diagram — typically featuring concentric circles and squares, radial symmetry, and a defined center — that functions as a map of the cosmos, a meditation ai

mandala sacred architecture Borobudur Angkor Wat Hindu temple Buddhist temple
D_4_10 Speculative Sites & Artifacts

D_4_10 — Yonaguni Formation: Japan's Submerged Stone Controversy

The Yonaguni Formation (also called the "Yonaguni Monument" or "Yonaguni Submarine Ruins") is a submerged rock structure located off the southern coast of Yonaguni Island, the westernmost of Japan's Ryukyu Islands (24°26

Yonaguni Yonaguni Monument Masaaki Kimura Robert Schoch submerged structure natural formation
B_2_00 Beings & Entities

B_2_00 — Humanoid Crypto Entities: Subfolder Summary

B_1_05 Beings & Entities

B_1_05 — Metatron — The Angelic Scribe and Divine Mediator

Metatron is the highest-ranking angel in Jewish mystical tradition — variously called the "Prince of the Countenance" (sar ha-panim), the "Lesser YHWH" (YHWH ha-qatan), and the heavenly scribe who records the deeds of Is

Metatron angel scribe Enoch 3 Enoch Sefer Hekhalot
ZD_1_11 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_1_11 — Turing Machine, Computability, and the Limits of Computation

The Turing machine — a mathematical model of computation defined by Alan Turing in his 1936 paper "On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem" — is the foundational formalism of theoretical co

Turing machine computability decidability halting problem Church-Turing thesis algorithm
ZD_1_05 Information & Computation

ZD_1_05 — Computational Complexity: P vs NP and the Limits of Efficient Computation

Computational complexity theory classifies problems not by whether they can be solved, but by how efficiently they can be solved — and its central open question, P vs NP, is one of the seven Clay Millennium Prize Problem

computational complexity P vs NP NP-completeness complexity classes polynomial time Turing machines
ZD_5_00 Information & Computation

ZD_5_00 — Digital Culture Tools: Subfolder Summary

L_2_16 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_2_16 — Genetic Diversity and Inbreeding: Population Health Across History

Genetic diversity — the total amount of genetic variation within a population — is a fundamental determinant of population health, adaptive potential, and long-term survival. The loss of diversity through inbreeding (mat

genetic diversity inbreeding consanguinity runs of homozygosity ROH inbreeding depression
L_3_04 Genetics & Origins

L_3_04 — Y-Chromosome Phylogeny and Patrilineal Deep History

The Y chromosome, transmitted exclusively from father to son, provides a uniquely informative window into patrilineal human history.

Y-chromosome haplogroup patrilineal Y-chromosomal Adam A00 R1b
L_5_06 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_5_06 — Genetic Adaptation to Disease: Malaria, Plague, TB

Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force on the human genome throughout history. Pathogens — particularly malaria, plague, tuberculosis, smallpox, and cholera — have killed more humans than all other

natural selection disease adaptation malaria sickle cell G6PD Duffy antigen
H_3_12 Credible Suppression & Thesis

H_3_12 — Museum Decontextualization: How Display Distorts Meaning

When an archaeological artifact is removed from its findspot — the soil layer, building, grave, or landscape in which it was deposited — and placed in a museum vitrine, it undergoes a fundamental transformation of meanin

museum display decontextualization exhibition interpretation curation