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…
Generated by Fable · below the evidence/publication boundary
One Thousand and One Conjectures
308 of 1001 posed · 158 shepherd-triaged · 150 provisional · 0 frontier · 20 predictions · 9 resolved (6 supported / 3 killed) — the 1001st will be posed at Ars Inquirendi, Oxford, 20 November 2026.
Cross-domain conjectures generated noetically by Fable — a frontier AI proposing, from its own knowledge, surprising connections between two well-known domains that it judged likely to be both novel and important. Each pairs a specific claim with a quantitative prediction and a dataset that could prove it wrong; each was then checked against the literature to flag the ones with known priors.
This is one form of lead generation for Inferpedia, the encyclopedia of the missing — and this page is an early preview.
Why these conjectures matter: charting the noetome — its structure, limits & potential →
Nothing here is claimed as verified-novel. Each sits below the evidence/publication boundary: a connection already known in the literature is shown honestly and tagged Prior, and every prediction is registered before it is scored. Spotted a prior yourself? Open any conjecture and weigh in.
Filter
Clear all filtersWhat the tags mean
- Open — no decisive result yet
- Prior — a prior formulation exists in the literature
- 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 51–100 of 150 matching conjectures.
Jain manuscript libraries preserved their opponents better than the opponents preserved themselves. Jain debate pedagogy required possession of rival texts, and the temple bhandaras had the institutional continuity that Brahmanical family-and-school transmission lacked; Brahmanical lines copied their own school, Jain libraries copied…
in the Sanskrit-Chinese transmission, terminological innovation was institutional, not chronological. State translation bureaus — staffed with bilingual philologists and armed with imperial authority — coined novel technical vocabulary freely, while lone translator-monks of the same decades reused familiar, often Daoist-flavored vocabulary, because…
Byzantine book epigrams stratify by the industrial structure of the copying that carried them. Liturgical and biblical books were produced by professional scribes reproducing a whole book-object, paratexts included, so their epigrams are mass-replicated formulae; philosophical manuscripts were copied by and for…
the Sentences-commentary genre drifted from pastoral coverage to speculative concentration on a measurable schedule. Disputational prestige, not curricular duty, set the incentives, and prestige lived in Book I's frontier problems — divine knowledge, future contingents, intension of forms — so between 1250…
the Tibetan imperial translation reform (the Mahavyutpatti and the sGra sbyor bam po gnyis pa decree, c. 814) shows that pre-print doctrinal standardization operated on vocabulary, not wording. When old translations were revised into the canonical versions, revisers should have overwhelmingly replaced…
in the Syriac schools, logic was not a discipline but a fixed propaedeutic block welded to theological training, so it was copied as a single curricular object for over a millennium. Porphyry's Eisagoge, the Categories, and De interpretatione should move together; the…
after about 1300 the working Aristotle of the arts faculties was a florilegium of exam-ready tags, not the translations. Oral disputation and examination rewarded fixed memorizable slogans, and once the popular auctoritates handbooks compiled them, the tag-list became the effective text —…
Coptic literacy was built by theology before administration touched it. The script community was created by scripture-reading and monastic institutions, and only once that community existed did Coptic seep into contracts, letters, and receipts — so documentary Coptic should lag literary and…
across the great translation movements, commentaries crossed the language frontier at far lower rates than base texts — except lemmatized commentaries that embed their base text, which crossed at near-base-text rates. Patrons commissioned usable, self-sufficient objects; a commentary without its base text…
This connects the diplomatics of multi-session audition certificates (samaʿat) with the incentive structure of certification. A samaʿ record for a long book lists who attended which sessions, and the legal and spiritual payoff was concentrated at the end: transmission rights vested at…
This connects Arabic quire structure with the economics of the paper trade. Arabic codices characteristically use quinions (five-bifolium gatherings) where Greek, Syriac, and Latin books use quaternions, and the difference is usually filed under scribal custom. The conjecture: the quinion is a…
This connects selective diacritical pointing in early Arabic documents with the sociology of correspondence. Pointing cost time and scribes applied it selectively; the question is what governed the selection. The conjecture: pointing density tracks social distance between writer and recipient. Between intimates,…
This connects hisba-literature complaints about copyists with measurable page economics. The market inspectors' manuals warn that copyists paid by the quire enlarge their script and widen spacing to inflate the folio count. If the warning tracked real practice rather than moralist boilerplate,…
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 well-known devaluation of the ijaza into a formality with the rhetoric of the document itself. As real audition decayed into blanket and even to-whom-it-may-concern licenses, the certificate lost evidentiary content; the conjecture is that the parchment compensated. Neither the…
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 the one substantially surviving medieval Arabic institutional library catalogue with household book culture. An endowed library and a scholar's home solved different problems: the home held the curriculum, the matns, the working copies a man taught from and annotated; the…
This connects Islamic endowment law with the diplomatics of ownership statements. A waqf book was inalienable in perpetuity, so private possession of one was legally embarrassing: a signed, dated tamalluk note on an alienated endowment book is a confession in the owner's…
This connects market law with the division of epistemic labor in the book trade. The hisba manuals regulate bakers' loaves and druggists' compounds, and they also cover the warraqs. The conjecture: their copyist clauses police only the material object, fading ink, badly…
This connects Ottoman probate evidence with the economics of a copyright-free book market. Where any text could be lawfully recopied by anyone, the work itself commanded no rent; scarcity lived entirely in the object, in the calligraphy, illumination, paper, and binding. The…
This connects paper-trade standardization with the size distribution of surviving books. Paper left the mill in named full-sheet formats, and books were cut as the full sheet, its half, its quarter, its eighth; a warraq's stock was a ladder, not a continuum.…
This connects the known takeover of the Islamic paper market by European mills with a datable moving boundary in the codicological record. Watermarked Italian paper displaced Oriental laid paper, but not everywhere at once: it should have swept as a front, arriving…
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 colophon's weekday with devotional time-keeping in the workshop. Completion of a copy was an event, and the khatma carried blessing; a scribe nearing the end of the final quire could steer the finish to a blessed day, and had…
This connects book provenance with demographic catastrophe. Every owner's death sends a book to the estate division and often to the market; mass mortality is therefore legible as accelerated turnover on flyleaves. The Black Death and its recurrences in the Mamluk lands…
This connects recension competition with institutional canonization dynamics. Malik's Muwatta circulated in well over a dozen riwayat; today one, that of Yahya al-Laythi, simply is the Muwatta. The conjecture: recension shares do not drift smoothly toward a winner. They show punctuated equilibrium,…
This connects the near-monopoly of one Qurʾanic transmission (Hafs ʿan ʿAsim) in the later manuscript record with imperial book provisioning rather than early canon dynamics. Regional readings, Warsh, Qalun, al-Duri, held substantial shares of the copied record for centuries. The conjecture: the…
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…
This connects the composite volume (majmuʿa) with the curriculum's fossil record. A majmuʿa looks like a miscellany, but owners bound the treatises they studied together, in the order and company they studied them. Across thousands of independently assembled volumes, the same small…
This connects art patronage with textual growth in the Persian epic tradition. Shahnama copies vary by thousands of verses, and the variation is usually treated as scribal drift. The conjecture: interpolation was patron-driven. A royal commission was a completeness market, the fullest…
This connects Ottoman anthology compilation with performance sociology. A mecmua looks like a scrapbook, but if compilers wrote poems down as they circulated in meclis gatherings where poets answered one another in kind, then adjacency in the volume preserves adjacency in the…
This connects two transmission systems that used the same certificate instrument, the ijaza, to opposite network topologies. A hadith ijaza cost an afternoon of audition, so students accumulated links by the hundred and the network is a dense mesh. A calligraphy ijaza…
This connects script choice with information control in a shared-language world. Garshuni, Arabic language in Syriac script, is usually explained as scribal habit or identity display. The conjecture: it also functioned as a soft access-control layer, keeping community texts in the common…
This connects the palimpsest census with the communal boundaries of the paper economy. Once paper was cheap, scraping parchment stopped paying for anyone who bought materials on the open market, and the Muslim urban book trade lived on that market. Monastic communities…
This connects library ecology with the age structure of surviving copies. In high-churn metropolitan book markets, old copies were superseded, sold off, and scrapped: replacement, not catastrophe, is the great killer of early exemplars. Yemen's Zaydi libraries sat in a low-churn ecology,…
This connects the long Indian manuscript age with curricular divergence across the Persianate world. Manuscript production in India ran strong into the 19th century, and the Indian madrasa canon that matured in that period weighted the rational sciences, logic, philosophical theology, astronomy,…
The Kaiyuan shijiao lu's judgments of spuriousness and the economics of the lay merit market are the same fact seen twice: a genuine translation inherits its length from an Indic original, but an indigenously composed scripture is written INTO the merit economy,…
The institutional roster of the state translation assembly (yichang) — which included a dedicated zhengzi orthography-rectifier and a bishou receiver — should be legible in the statistics of Sanskrit-name transliteration. A solo translator spells a foreign name as it comes to him…
Read the dynastic bibliographic treatises as longitudinal panel data and two opposite textual metabolisms appear in one catalogue. Classics-with-commentary live in classrooms, where each generation's teaching accretes layers that get counted into the same title's juan total; individual literary collections (bieji) live…
Tabooed-graph avoidance has two different carriers that the handbooks conflate: in freshly composed documents it is performed etiquette — current politics inked in real time — while in sutra copying it is inherited from the exemplar, because a copyist reproducing a sacred…
The celebrated accuracy of the second Tripitaka Koreana conceals a geopolitics of textual lineage. Sugi's collation bureau worked from three witnesses — the Song Kai-bao line, the Khitan (Liao) canon, and the first Koryo carving — and recorded its adjudications in the…
Leishu quotation habits should encode the physical access cost of the scroll. A compiler excerpting a source before the late Tang paid a sequential-access price — matter at the head of a juan costs one motion of the roller, matter at the…
The Siku quanshu zongmu's two-tier structure — titles copied into the imperial library versus cunmu, listed but not transcribed — is a natural experiment on which genres lived by state canonization and which by private demand. Being left out of the imperial…
The manuscript-to-woodblock interface should flip the error spectrum of a scripture. A copyist holds the text in his ear for the span of a phrase (self-dictation), so his slips are homophones; a block carver — often semi-lettered, cutting mirror-reversed graphs from a…
The Guanshiyin pumen pin circulated both inside full Lotus Sutra copies and as a standalone apotropaic booklet. Inside the Lotus, a copyist works from full-canon exemplars under sutra-copying discipline and proofreading chains; the standalone charm-text is copied from whatever single sheet came…
The standard sutra format — seventeen graphs per column, fixed columns per sheet — is best explained as piece-rate labor technology, not aesthetics or numerology. A fixed grid makes the sheet a unit of pay and audit: sheets-per-juan becomes predictable, a paymaster…