This joins the Classic Maya collapse to the physics of percolation — the mathematics of systems that fail not gradually but when a critical threshold is crossed. Lowland Maya cities rode out the dry season on constructed reservoirs, so each city's resilience…
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 1–5 of 5 matching conjectures.
This joins the vast water network of medieval Angkor to the theory of self-organized criticality — the sandpile physics in which a slowly loaded system tunes itself to a critical state where avalanches of every size occur, their sizes following a power…
The Garamantes of the Libyan Fezzan built one of antiquity's great irrigation systems: hundreds of kilometres of foggaras — underground channels of the qanat family — tapping a fossil aquifer left over from a wetter Sahara, water that was being mined, not…
Markowitz's portfolio theory says diversification pays exactly when the assets you spread across are weakly correlated — variance falls fastest where covariance is low. The medieval open-field system's scattered strips, a puzzle ever since they were read as peasant insurance, are a…
Airborne LiDAR has stripped the canopy from the Maya lowlands and revealed settlement in the tens of thousands of structures, making true regional settlement hierarchies measurable for the first time; settlement-scaling theory, meanwhile, holds that integrated urban systems produce Zipfian rank-size distributions…