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AI-generated conjecture · below the evidence/publication boundary

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The empire fell; the alphabet stayed for the phonics

Status: Already answered

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).

This is a proposed connection between two domains, generated by a language model. It is not an article and not evidence: it sits below the evidence/publication boundary. A quantitative prediction and a named kill-dataset are attached (when registered) so the claim stays falsifiable rather than merely evocative.

Claim (verbatim)

Tibetan rule at Dunhuang ended in 848, yet locals went on using the Tibetan alphabet — including to write the Chinese language phonetically. Join imperial history to the classroom: an alphabet, once seeded, survives on its learnability rather than on its army, because for learners and for anyone who needs to record sound — pronunciations of scripture, names, spoken Chinese — an alphabet beats a logography. Post-imperial Dunhuang should therefore treat Tibetan script as a phonetic technology detached from Tibetan power and even from the Tibetan language, and the trace is measurable: Chinese-in-Tibetan-script items should be overwhelmingly post-848 and concentrated in pedagogic and phonetic genres. If this holds, script choice at the oases was driven by cognitive utility as much as by politics, and every dating rule that infers political period from script needs a decoupling correction.

Prediction clause (verbatim)

Primary clause (verdict-bearing): at least 80% of datable Dunhuang items writing the Chinese language in Tibetan script fall after the end of Tibetan rule in 848. Secondary clause: their genre profile is dominated by educational, phonological, and popular-religious uses rather than official documents.

Kill-dataset (verbatim)

IDP and OTDO records of Chinese-in-Tibetan-script items from Dunhuang with dating evidence.

In the atlas

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Provenance

Run: Fresh agent generation · model: claude-fable-5

Generated blind in a single Write by a fresh instance with no file reads, web access, or database queries; all context was inline in the launching prompt.

Novelty / leakage triage

already answered in the literature

Takata has published this exact connection: Tibeto-Chinese transcription texts securely attributable to the occupation period are 'surprisingly rare', use of Tibetan script for Chinese continued through the Guiyijun into the tenth century, and the texts are catechisms, eulogies and phonetic/pedagogic material used in tenth-century monasteries — i.e. the post-848, phonetic-technology reading is established.

Predictions

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