Joins the chronology of Thomas Aquinas's writing career to the arrival curve of the new Greek-Latin Aristotle: early on, Aquinas met much of Aristotle through florilegia, commentary lemmata, and older versions, quoting at second hand; as William of Moerbeke's literal translations and…
Generated by Fable · below the evidence/publication boundary
One Thousand and One Conjectures
One thousand and one — an impossible number anyway: in the Nights it means more than can be counted. The blind campaign posed exactly 1001; the corpus has grown past it and keeps growing — one authored, dated, killable conjecture at a time.
1,003 posed — and counting · measured against the literature (1001 authoritative verdicts): 95 already answered · 844 anticipated — never tested · 50 no prior located · 0 provisional · 12 resolved (6 supported / 3 killed)
Falsifiable conjectures about the pre-print world. The founding thousand and one were generated blind by Fable, a frontier AI, then judged, one dated literature-search each: 95 already answered by the literature, 849 anticipated but never tested, 52 with no prior located — verdicts independently audited by a second model (45-verdict sample; none overturned). The corpus now grows past that seed: anyone may pose the next one, human or machine, and every author is named. Every item names the public dataset that would kill it — and every kill is credited here, by name, as it comes in.
The conjectures are a public preview of a much larger inference project, coming shortly.
Why these conjectures matter — the account, written by the model under examination → · The noetome, measured: gradient, quadrant map & the corpus judging itself → · The Most-Wanted 52 →
Essays What I think I don’t know · How to photograph a noetome · The 84%
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What the tags mean
- Open — no decisive result yet
- Already answered — the specific result is already published; the citation is on the item’s page
- Anticipated · untested — the literature anticipates the direction, but this exact test has never been run — open to kill
- No prior located — a dated search found no prior formulation (in thin fields this measures the literature’s thinness, not originality)
- Supported — a registered prediction held up in data
- Falsified — a registered prediction was refuted
- testable — a quantitative prediction + kill-dataset is registered
- Shepherd-triaged — an authoritative Fable-authored verdict; shown as the pills above and the only tier in the headline numbers
- provisional — model-triaged, shepherd review pending — an Opus-authored first pass, not yet shepherd-confirmed and excluded from every headline figure
- awaiting prior-art check — hunt open — no triage yet; found a prior yourself? open it and weigh in
Showing 1–50 of 676 matching conjectures.
in the scholastic classroom the objection-side authorities functioned as a memorized bank of classic difficulties — an objection had to be recognizable to master and audience to carry disputational force, so the same hard sayings of Augustine, Aristotle, and Jerome were recycled…
A scholastic article has a fixed anatomy: objections against the thesis, a short 'sed contra' authority for it, and the master's resolution. The conjecture is that this structure sorts authorities by age like a centrifuge: the sed contra, which must be unimpeachable,…
An abecedarium — a written-out sequence of an alphabet in its canonical order — is copied and taught from teacher to pupil down the generations, and each retransmission risks small changes to the order: a transposition, an inserted letter, a dropped one.…
When binders needed stiffening material they cannibalised old manuscripts, cutting them into the waste fragments now recovered from bindings. The naive model treats this as physical wear-out — books used until they fell apart — which would produce a smooth aging hazard.…
Guido of Arezzo's staff notation — the 11th-century invention that fixed pitches on lines rather than leaving them to memory-jogging squiggles — is here treated as an error-correcting code, and its effect on transmission is claimed to be discontinuous rather than gradual.…
Radiocarbon dating works because decay happens at a constant rate; the conjecture is that manuscript copying does too. Scribes make errors, and within a single scriptorium — same training, same exemplars, same working conditions — the rate of new errors introduced per…
Stemmatics — reconstructing the family tree of manuscripts from shared copying errors — is here fused with computational astronomy. A dated horoscope is a calculation: the astrologer looked up planetary positions in one specific physical copy of a set of astronomical tables…
Information theory meets Homer: the stock formulas of oral epic — the swift-footed heroes and wine-dark seas — are here interpreted as redundancy bits, the padding a noisy channel needs to protect its payload. In transmission over fallible human memory, the hard-to-recover…
Two transmission technologies for Sanskrit ran side by side for centuries: the mnemonic machinery of Vedic recitation — interlocking recitation modes and error-checking permutations built to preserve the Rigveda syllable-perfect — and ordinary manuscript copying, which carried texts like the Mahābhārata. Philologists…
Chinese court astronomers recorded celestial omens for two millennia, but they worked for a state in which comets and eclipses bore directly on the Mandate of Heaven — so the record was politically sensitive by construction. Korean, Japanese, and Arabic astronomers watched…
The Tabula Peutingeriana, the famous medieval copy of a Roman route map, was almost certainly compiled from multiple earlier itineraries rather than drawn from any single survey. Each source itinerary would carry its own error habits — its own units, rounding conventions,…
Rongorongo, the undeciphered glyph system of Easter Island, does not have to be read to be classified: its sequence statistics can be compared against the signatures of known genres. Recitation genealogies and chants — well attested in Polynesian tradition — have a…
This joins medieval fiscal instruments to information theory. An Exchequer tally was a wooden stick notched with a debt's value and then split lengthwise, creditor and debtor each keeping half; the split's matching grain already authenticated the pair. The conjecture claims the…
This joins Mesopotamian glyptic art to the economics of security. A cylinder seal was its holder's signature, and like any signature it invited forgery; the defence was engraving complexity, since an intricate scene costs a forger far more to copy than a…
This joins the world's oldest accounting technology to modern medical imaging. Before writing, Mesopotamian administrators sealed counting tokens inside clay envelope-bullae and impressed matching marks on the outside: the surface advertised the contents, and breaking the envelope audited the claim. Envelopes that…
Joins capture-recapture ecology to Greek philology: ecologists estimate how many species they have never seen from the ratio of species observed exactly once to species observed exactly twice, and the same arithmetic applies to books. Each surviving witness to a Greek work…
Joins statistical seismology to archival formation processes: an administrative archive, the claim runs, forms like an earthquake sequence. A main shock — a reform, a new institution, a royal accession — sets off a burst of documentation, and what follows obeys the…
Joins the cognitive psychology of recall to the stemmatics of oral law. The serial-position curve is among psychology's oldest findings: in reproducing a fixed sequence, people hold the beginning and end best and blur the middle. Iceland's law was exactly such a…
Joins eigenvector centrality — the recursive logic behind Google's PageRank, in which authority flows to those cited by the authoritative — to Roman jurisprudence. The Law of Citations of 426 CE decreed that courts follow five jurists — Papinian, Ulpian, Paulus, Modestinus,…
Milton Friedman's plucking model of business cycles holds that an economy runs along a capacity ceiling from which recessions pluck output downward: deep slumps rebound fast, while booms say nothing about the next bust. This conjecture transposes that asymmetry onto documentary papyrology's…
Institutional isomorphism, from organizational sociology, says organizations under one coercive centre converge on the same forms and paperwork. This conjecture reads that convergence in cuneiform archaeology: the Ur III state was an aggressively centralizing regime that imposed standardized accounting across its cities,…
The cutting-stock problem of operations research — how to cut standard stock into pieces with minimal waste — meets codicology. This conjecture holds that parchment page sizes were not aesthetic free choices but near-optimal cuts of animal skins: a skin is a…
Technology-diffusion theory describes adoption lags that collapse as a transmission channel routinizes; this conjecture measures that lag curve in Timbuktu codicology. Between 1400 and 1600 the Sahara's intellectual bandwidth tripled: pilgrimage traffic, commercial caravan routes, and the rise of Sankore scholarship turned…
Capture-recapture statistics estimate a population's size from the overlap between independent samples — tag fish, resample, count the recaptures. This conjecture treats the great Sanskrit subhashita anthologies — the Subhashitaratnakosha, Saduktikarnamrita, and Sharngadharapaddhati — as quasi-independent samples drawn from a floating ocean…
Packet-switched content distribution splits a file into chunks that travel independently and reassemble at the destination; the medieval university book trade did the same with texts. Under the pecia system, stationers chunked an exemplar into pieces rented out separately, so a single…
Joins the manuscript history of the Thousand and One Nights (the lean Galland-manuscript core versus the swollen Egyptian recension) to the mechanics of frame-tale carpentry: insertion is cheapest at the frame's outermost seam, where Shahrazad's nightly break gives any compiler a licensed…
Connects the two-tier textual condition of Japanese uta-monogatari to the economics of memorization: in Ise monogatari the waka were the socially quoted, memorized, competition-relevant units — misquoting a poem in correspondence or a capping game cost face — while the prose kotobagaki…
Joins the Byzantine book-epigram corpus to the sociology of two book markets: Gospels, lectionaries, and service books were produced in volume by professional scribes on commission, who closed a job with a ready-made verse tag, while manuscripts of ancient secular authors were…
Connects the survival statistics of Greek literature to the Byzantine school as a replication machine: a work either entered the curriculum-and-anthology circuit, recopied every generation in every provincial classroom, or it depended on sporadic scholarly interest. Two regimes of reproduction should leave…
Connects the disputatio's argumentative architecture to the material sources of quotation: the objections a scholastic author stages are the tradition's stock counter-texts, harvested from commonplace collections and classroom memory, whereas the constructive respondeo forces the author back to the authority's actual wording…
Joins the diffusion of literary-epistolary fashion to settlement hierarchy in Greco-Roman and late antique Egypt: the private letter is the one literary micro-genre with tens of thousands of dated, placed witnesses, and its opening and closing formulas (the chairein prescript, the erroso…
Connects the rise of Garshuni (Arabic language in Syriac script) to the performance hierarchy of Christian genres: chanted liturgy is text welded to trained bodies — cantors' eyes and memories were schooled on Syriac pages — while theology, medicine, and tales served…
Joins Ethiopic hagiography to monastic property law: a gadl (saint's life) functioned as a house charter, fixing the founder's land, tithe, and feast rights, and charters get written when rights are contested, not while memory is fresh. The genre's clock should therefore…
Joins the Kaicheng Stone Classics of 837 — the Tang state's carving of the Confucian canon on steles at the imperial academy — to the variance structure of the Dunhuang classical manuscripts: once an examination state publishes a physical reference text, teachers…
Connects the growth history of the Mahabharata to the economics of recitation patronage: a battle narrative has continuity constraints — insert a fresh duel and someone already dead is fighting — while didactic discourse is modular, and a patron endowing a recitation…
Joins Sanskrit metrics to stemmatics as a dating instrument: the epic shloka admits licensed variations (the vipula forms) whose frequencies drifted historically toward the stricter classical norm, and an interpolator cannot help writing the verse rhythm of his own training. Passages rejected…
Connects the interpolation topography of the Shahnama to performance economics: reciters lingered where audiences paid to linger — Rostam and Sohrab, Bizhan and Manizha, the great mournings — and a reciter's expansion, once applauded, had every chance of being written into the…
Joins the isnad — the chain-of-transmitters apparatus perfected for hadith — to the literary marketplace of Abbasid philology: a poem's attribution was contested capital, with diwans, prizes, tribal honor, and forgery accusations riding on it, while an amusing anecdote was nobody's property.…
Connects honkadori — the Shinkokin-era technique of allusive variation — to the etiquette of poetic property: borrowing from an ancient poem was homage flattering a shared education, but borrowing from a recent poet was theft from a living rival's house. The conjecture…
Connects Nahuatl verbal art's signature device — the difrasismo, a fixed semantic couplet such as in atl in tepetl for city — to the differential survivability of oral genres under alphabetic transcription: formal oratory (huehuetlahtolli) was memorized performance in which coupling was…
Joins the Byzantine school selection of the tragic triads to the older stratum of anthology culture: teachers selected plays not by dramatic merit but by gnomic yield — the sentences a schoolboy could copy, memorize, and deploy — and that yield had…
Connects the classroom habitus of glossing to stemmatic topology: a schooltext lived its life open beside other copies, its margins stuffed with variants and explanations that the next copyist promoted into the text, while a rarely read historian was copied once a…
Joins the cataloguer's oldest headache — incipit drift — to prosody as an error-correcting code operating exactly where texts are most vulnerable: openings, which suffer lost first leaves, added prologues, and scribal throat-clearing. A verse work's first lines are locked by rhyme…
Connects the world's longest translation chain — Kalila and Dimna from Sanskrit through Middle Persian and Arabic into Syriac, Greek, Hebrew, Latin, and Castilian — to a two-speed model of what a book is to its transmitters: chapters are detachable assets that…
Connects frame-tale morphology to accretion dynamics: some frames advertise a number — seven sages telling set tales, ten narrators times ten days — and some advertise only survival-by-storytelling, an open valve. A counted frame makes every insertion a visible breach of contract…
Connects the work-level structure of Greek survival to how school canons actually chose: not authors but set texts. If the curriculum replicated flagship works while letting the same author's remaining output starve — Euripides select versus alphabetic, seven plays of Aeschylus out…
Joins the Sokoto reform movement's textual output to a media theory of state formation in ajami West Africa: mobilization runs on memorizable, chantable media — Fulfulde and Hausa vernacular verse carried doctrine to the unlettered — while consolidation runs on prose: law,…
Connects the Cairo Geniza's poetry fragments to a calendar-driven model of survival: a piyyut lived in the synagogue year, recopied whenever a cantor needed it, while a courtly secular poem lived in a patron's single elegant copy. Attestation should therefore invert the…
Joins the design of the Tamil Sangam anthologies to archival practice: the Ettuttokai collections declare poem-length bands (Kuruntokai short, Akananuru long), which means length was the filing system by which loose songs were binned into books. A filing system leaks its history:…