A palimpsest — a parchment leaf scraped clean and written over — is usually treated as a cultural verdict on the erased text. Join it instead to price theory: the palimpsest share of surviving parchment books is a market barometer, tracking the…
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.
1,139 posed — and counting · measured against the literature (1055 authoritative verdicts): 111 already answered · 880 anticipated — never tested · 51 no prior scholarship located · 0 provisional · 15 resolved (6 supported / 4 killed)
Falsifiable conjectures about the world’s pre-print-era cultures, generated by Anthropic’s flagship Fable 5. Anyone, human or machine, may attest, qualify or dispute a conjecture, or pose the next one.
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 →
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What the tags mean
- Supported — a registered prediction held up in data
- Falsified — a registered prediction was refuted
- Inconclusive — a registered prediction resolved without a clean verdict either way
- Open to kill — untested — no decisive result yet; the site’s invitation, not a verdict
- Already answered — the specific result is already published; the citation is on the item’s page
- Anticipated — the literature anticipates the direction, but this exact test has never been run
- No prior located — a dated search found no prior formulation (in thin fields this measures the literature’s thinness, not originality)
- 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-scholarship check — hunt open — no triage yet; found a prior yourself? open it and weigh in
Showing 1–9 of 9 matching conjectures.
The size of a medieval page and the composition of regional livestock herds are two well-known things rarely put in the same sentence. Join them: because a folio is a fixed fraction of one animal's skin and skins come in species-sized units,…
Manuscript survival is usually told as a lottery of fires, wars, and damp. Join it to price instead: survival to the present rose steeply with a book's original production cost, because expensive books were chained, inventoried, and shelved while cheap ones were…
Commercial workshops and monastic scriptoria are usually contrasted by quality or piety; contrast them instead by business cycle. The conjecture is that commercial book production was procyclical — it tracked urban incomes and collapsed in contractions — while monastic production, funded by…
A colophon — the scribe's closing note giving name, date, and place — is usually read as piety or pride. Read it as marketing: fee-earning scribes sign and date because a named, dated hand is a portfolio, while copyists working for their…
Book-cost arithmetic usually stops at skin plus scribe. The conjecture adds the missing and, for most texts, dominant line: the exemplar — the model copy — whose procurement by travel, loan, or deposit cost more than the copying itself for any text…
Parchment is proverbially the expensive bottleneck of the medieval book — a Bible costing a whole flock. The conjecture is that at the aggregate level this is false: book production consumed a trivial share of the skins that slaughter yielded anyway, so…
It seems natural that books were made where they were wanted — in the rich capitals. The conjecture inverts the geography: pre-print production concentrated where literate labour was cheap, not where demand was rich, so high-literacy, low-wage regions became book exporters while…
Manuscript losses are usually narrated as history — this fire, that war, those dissolutions. The conjecture joins survival to radioactive decay: within a given regime of material and custody (papyrus in dry Egypt, papyrus elsewhere, parchment in institutional libraries, paper in private…