Benford's law — the striking regularity that genuinely counted quantities begin with the digit 1 about six times as often as with 9 — is here turned on the Linear B accounting tablets of Mycenaean Knossos. Numbers that arise from real enumeration…
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 50 matching conjectures.
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.…
The Aṣṭādhyāyī, Pāṇini's fourth-century-BCE grammar of Sanskrit, achieves its legendary brevity partly through rule ordering: later rules silently inherit terms from earlier ones (anuvṛtti), so the total length of the grammar depends on the sequence in which its roughly four thousand rules…
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…
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,…
Priority queueing theory has a textbook pathology: give one class of customers near-absolute priority and their waiting times stay compact while low-priority waits blow up into a heavy tail. This conjecture finds that pathology in the Heian court's promotion ladder as recorded…
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…
post-classical madrasa scholasticism transmitted knowledge as a linked list, not a star. Each hashiya took the previous layer, not the root text, as its classroom object, because teaching consumed the newest sharh as the effective text while the matn survived only as…
Sanskrit philosophical debate preserved its enemies more faithfully than its authors. Once a rival school went extinct, its positions fossilized into stock quotable verses that every refuter reproduced nearly verbatim — fairness conventions required quoting the opponent exactly, and after the opponents'…
in kalam and falsafa, measurable text-reuse binds an author more tightly to the opponents he refutes than to his own school's masters, because refutation obligates verbatim quotation — the opponent must be pinned to his exact wording before demolition — while agreement…
in the Guide of the Perplexed, naming is a safety and positioning policy, not a bibliography. Maimonides names authorities who are canonical and safely dead (Aristotle, al-Farabi) while his heaviest structural and textual dependence — the Avicennian analysis of necessary and possible…
Indian philosophical curricula froze their opponent-set at the moment of the opponents' extinction. After Buddhism vanished from the subcontinent, Brahmanical works kept allotting Buddhists their full traditional share of polemical space for centuries, but the Buddhists engaged should be exclusively pre-extinction classics…
where the Greek-Arabic translation movement left doublets — a transliterated loan and a native-root calque for the same Greek term — later usage did not converge on a winner. The loan survived as a genre badge of falsafa while the calque won…
This connects collation practice with the error spectrum of the resulting copies. Muqabala was typically performed aloud: one party reads the exemplar while the other follows the new copy. An acoustic channel catches what the ear can hear, namely omitted words, skipped…
This connects the market for isnad elevation (ʿuluww) with the demography of audition sessions. Families brought small children to auditions to mint transmitters whose chains would be enviably short seventy years later; that custom is known. The sharpening: child-bringing was priced arbitrage,…
This connects transmission genealogy with urban market structure. In a metropole a student could shop among a hundred shaykhs; in a small town the household was the archive. Father-to-son transmission (ʿan abihi ʿan jaddihi) was therefore not primarily piety but a thin-market…
This connects the function of the tabaqat genre with a measurable network asymmetry. A biographical notice certifies credentials: it names the subject's teachers because his authority flows down from them, while his students are the future's business and someone else's entry. If…
This connects Ibn al-Nadim's profession with the mortality structure of his catalogue. The Fihrist of 377 AH was compiled by a warraq from stall-level knowledge: it records inventory, including the ephemera of a living market that scholars never canonized. A title known…
This connects a demographer's instrument with scribal diplomatics. Dates recalled or reconstructed from memory heap on round numbers; dates written down on the day itself do not. A colophon is written at the moment of completion, often with weekday and month attached…
This connects the sharh economy with scholarly etiquette and market timing. A living author could still revise, still answer objections, still teach the text as its living oracle; glossing another man's matn during his lifetime was both presumptuous and commercially premature, since…
The man'yogana graph-per-syllable inventory should narrow as poetry recording became clerical. Early Man'yoshu strata record poems through whichever graphs a given scribe's Chinese training suggested — a wide, idiosyncratic inventory — while later compilation strata are quasi-chancery work, and every chancery converges…
The great Old French epic cycles — the dozens of chansons de geste about Guillaume d'Orange or the rebellious barons that circulate welded together in huge thirteenth-century codices — are usually explained as literary projects: poets and compilers deliberately building a saga.…
Across the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, French and English verse saints' lives were massively rewritten as prose — the standard modernization story again. This conjecture claims the conversion was systematically incomplete in one place: the miracle scenes. Prosifiers flattened travel, genealogy, and…
South Asianists agree the extant corpus is a fraction of what was written, but the fraction has rarely been given a number with a method behind it. Ecology has the method: mark-recapture, where the overlap between two independent samples of a population…
From about the twelfth century, Sanskrit legal culture produced nibandhas — massive topical digests that excerpted the older smṛti texts so thoroughly that a working jurist no longer needed the originals. On a recopying treadmill, not being needed is a death sentence:…
For heavily taught śāstra texts the commentary was the working format: students met the sūtras already wrapped in explanation, and the bare root text became a specialist's object. Copying demand should therefore invert the intuitive hierarchy — the derivative outnumbers the original…
Subhāṣita anthologies — the medieval collections of quotable verses — sampled the poetry of their day the way a sediment core samples a vanished lake: verse by verse, with attributions, from whatever was circulating. Because the anthologist sampled circulation while the recopying…
Two selection pressures squeezed Sanskrit works from opposite ends of the length scale: very long works cost too much to recopy whole, while very short works were absorbed into anthologies and compilations and lost independent circulation. The surviving population of independently transmitted…
Sanskrit works advertise their sizes — the śataka's hundred verses, the sahasra's thousand, the seven hundred of famous saptaśatīs — because a round or auspicious count was itself a literary form and a marketing claim. If the form mattered, the length distribution…
Nearly every Sanskrit work opens with a maṅgala verse saluting a deity, and the choice of deity was constrained by the author's sectarian formation even when the work's subject was neutral — a grammarian's Gaṇeśa or Śiva was inherited, not selected for…
An incipit — the opening words by which a medieval text was cited, catalogued, and sold — behaves like a fossilizing tag, but not all genres fossilize at the same rate. The surprising connection is that astronomical incipits mutate far more slowly…
The great medical handbooks were repeatedly abridged into epitomes, and the epitomes were then stuffed with new matter — this much is familiar. The surprising connection is that the process is a regular two-phase pulse with a stable ratio: first-generation epitomes cut…
Middle English medical writing is routinely described as translated 'from the Latin tradition', as if the whole Latin corpus fed it. The surprising connection is that the vernacular tapped almost exclusively the short-text layer — epitomes, compendia, and extracts — rather than…
The standard picture has Hindu-Arabic numerals entering Latin Europe through algorism treatises — books that explain the new arithmetic. The surprising connection is that the zero sign appears earlier and more consistently in Latin astronomical TABLES than in Latin arithmetical texts: the…
Mappae mundi look like pictures copied from pictures, and their genealogies are usually drawn accordingly. The surprising connection is that their place-name errors are textual, not graphic: omissions cluster in runs of names that are adjacent in written geographies but scattered on…
Copyists of world maps worked outward from the ideologically loaded centre, and their attention decayed with radius. The surprising connection is that copying fidelity on mappae mundi is therefore a radial function: error and omission density rises with distance from the map's…
Medieval sundials carry engraved hour-lines and hour labels, and computus manuals — the church's timekeeping textbooks — supplied the vocabulary. The surprising connection is that dial epigraphy tracks textbook succession: when a new computus text achieves dominance in a region's schools, the…
Pharmacological recipe collections grew by accretion as owners added what they acquired — this is agreed. The surprising connection is positional: the shared ancestral core of a collection sits at the HEAD, while witness-specific additions cluster at the tail and margins, because…
Translation between the scientific languages was not one flow but a ladder of genre-specific speeds. The surprising connection is the ordering: calendrical and computus material crossed a language frontier within roughly a generation, practical table canons within about two, and theoretical astronomy…
A mappa mundi has two inheritable layers: the drawn and written content, and the construction geometry laid down before any ink — compass-hole centres, ruled circles, division angles. The surprising connection is that these layers travel separately: physical workshop templates passed between…
Some scientific content circulated in both prose and mnemonic verse — versified computus, versified algorism, versified regimen. The surprising connection is that the verse versions systematically out-diffused their prose sources into regions of thin book culture, so the verse-to-prose witness ratio of…
Medieval books were sold, shelved, inventoried, and censored by their first lines. The surprising connection is that alchemical texts exploited this: they circulated under medical-looking incipits — openings promising waters, oils, and the conservation of the body — at rates far exceeding…
The uroscopy wheel — the circular diagram of graded flask colors that is medieval medicine's most recognizable image — normally appears embedded in a treatise, and editors assume image and text descended together. The surprising connection is that the wheel travels on…
Troubadour songs are saturated with performance deixis — I, you, my lady here, this very season — grammar that pointed at a room which vanished when the song entered a book. The prose vidas and razos, the little biographies and anecdotes that…
The chanson de geste laisse — the assonanced verse paragraph of variable length — was sized in performance by lungs, tune, and audience patience. Once chansons were copied into big multi-text cyclic reading codices, that governor was gone, and the surprising connection…
In the great troubadour chansonniers, only some songs carry musical staves, usually over the first stanza alone, and these books are often the ones organized as author monuments with tables and rubrics. The surprising connection is that the notation was bibliographic furniture…
Performance maximizes enacted direct speech — the jongleur impersonates his heroes — while private reading tolerates report. In the fifteenth century, adapters systematically turned old verse chansons de geste into prose for reading, and the surprising connection is that this rewriting event…
Medieval schooling leaned on verse mnemonics — grammar in meter, the calendar in rhyme — and on the memory arts, which teach recall by placing items on a regular visual grid. The surprising connection is that the page itself was engineered as…
Twelfth- and thirteenth-century France copied both chansons de geste, which lived simultaneously in memory and on parchment, and prose romances, which were born textual. The surprising connection is that the two genres should err through different organs even inside the same scriptoria:…
A performed work lives in the performer's head under a hero-and-episode identity; a written work is identified by its fixed opening words, the incipit. The surprising connection is that this difference is measurable straight out of the manuscript record: oral-derived genres should…