AI-generated conjecture · below the evidence/publication boundary
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Monastic Bass diffusion
Status is derived only from the shepherd-authored triage/prediction data above -- community submissions and claims are a separate overlay and can never change it (see the participation panel below).
Claim (verbatim)
Monastic Bass diffusion. Watermill adoption follows a Bass curve whose innovation coefficient is set by monastic presence — monks as the p-parameter of medieval technology. Falsify: dated mill records by region.
Kill-dataset (verbatim)
dated mill records by region.
Provenance
Run: Imported conversation (verbatim harvest) · model: claude-fable-5
Origin: operator conversation with Claude Fable 5 at max effort, conducted 2026-07-03, relayed verbatim by the operator into the shepherd session on 2026-07-04. No ModelRun exists for the original generation (it happened outside the pipeline); this transcript file is the canonical capture. Transcript path: docs/generated/conjecture_harvest_fablemax_20260703.md. Model (operator-attested, not pipeline-recorded): claude-fable-5. Novelty disclaimer (verbatim, load-bearing -- rule 4): "Same caveat as before, doubled: at 100 items across all of archaeology and history, some of these will have cousins in the literature I can't check. What I can guarantee is the format — each links two things not normally linked, and each names the dataset or measurement that would kill it."
Novelty / leakage triage
Adjacent (closely related prior work exists)
The monks-drive-mill-diffusion thesis is standard historiography (Benedictine holdings at Domesday; Cistercians as the main force of hydraulic-technology diffusion), so the qualitative join is published. The Bass-model formalization — monastic presence as the innovation coefficient p, fitted against dated mill records by region — was not located.
- Luttrell, 'The role of the monasteries in the development of medieval milling' — Monastic diffusion role
- 'Medieval Watermills - Diffusion, Control and Beneficiaries of a Powerful Technology' — Diffusion historiography
Predictions
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