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…
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 1–10 of 10 matching conjectures.
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 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 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 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,…
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…
Taboo observance is a writing-time behavior, but block recutting is a tracing-time behavior — a Yuan workshop recutting a Song edition pastes the old print face-down and cuts what it sees, so the dead dynasty's omitted strokes ride through untouched, while a…
Whether the empire printed or brushed a monumental compilation was decided by intended copies, never by size — blocks are a fixed cost recouped over impressions, so a work wanted in three copies is cheaper brushed however vast it is. The canons,…
The Tripitaka Koreana's 80,000-plus blocks at Haeinsa include later recut replacements among the 13th-century originals, and blocks die two ways: randomly (wood defects, accidents — uniform across the canon) or by use (inking, printing, handling — concentrated where prints were demanded). If…