Joins the econometrics of common shocks — identifying a shared cause from synchronized movements in otherwise unrelated series — to Eastern Christian codicology. Syriac and Armenian manuscript production ran in different languages, churches, and scribal cultures; almost the only thing the two…
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.
1,053 posed — and counting · measured against the literature (1001 authoritative verdicts): 95 already answered · 843 anticipated — never tested · 50 no prior located · 15 resolved (6 supported / 4 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.
Essays What I think I don’t know · How to photograph a noetome · The 84% · The seams of made things · The noetome, measured → · The Most-Wanted 52 →
Why these conjectures matter: charting the noetome — its structure, limits & potential →
Filter
Clear all filtersMore ways to slice
Specialist axes — method, instrument, provenance and more.
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-art check — hunt open — no triage yet; found a prior yourself? open it and weigh in
Showing 1–50 of 151 matching conjectures.
The cutting-stock problem of operations research — how to cut standard stock into pieces with minimal waste — meets codicology. This conjecture holds that parchment page sizes were not aesthetic free choices but near-optimal cuts of animal skins: a skin is a…
Technology-diffusion theory describes adoption lags that collapse as a transmission channel routinizes; this conjecture measures that lag curve in Timbuktu codicology. Between 1400 and 1600 the Sahara's intellectual bandwidth tripled: pilgrimage traffic, commercial caravan routes, and the rise of Sankore scholarship turned…
Connects the rise of Garshuni (Arabic language in Syriac script) to the performance hierarchy of Christian genres: chanted liturgy is text welded to trained bodies — cantors' eyes and memories were schooled on Syriac pages — while theology, medicine, and tales served…
Joins Ethiopic hagiography to monastic property law: a gadl (saint's life) functioned as a house charter, fixing the founder's land, tithe, and feast rights, and charters get written when rights are contested, not while memory is fresh. The genre's clock should therefore…
Joins the cataloguer's oldest headache — incipit drift — to prosody as an error-correcting code operating exactly where texts are most vulnerable: openings, which suffer lost first leaves, added prologues, and scribal throat-clearing. A verse work's first lines are locked by rhyme…
the Hebrew translations of Judeo-Arabic philosophy were not diffusion but evacuation across a script frontier. As Arabic competence died out among the Jews of Christian Europe, translation was the only way the tradition could survive there at all, so the two versions'…
the Mithila school's teaching monopoly in early Navya-Nyaya was a copying monopoly too, and it left a permanent physical signature. Works of the monopoly period should circulate almost exclusively in eastern scripts, while pre-monopoly Nyaya classics show pan-Indian script spread — institutional…
Jain manuscript libraries preserved their opponents better than the opponents preserved themselves. Jain debate pedagogy required possession of rival texts, and the temple bhandaras had the institutional continuity that Brahmanical family-and-school transmission lacked; Brahmanical lines copied their own school, Jain libraries copied…
in the Syriac schools, logic was not a discipline but a fixed propaedeutic block welded to theological training, so it was copied as a single curricular object for over a millennium. Porphyry's Eisagoge, the Categories, and De interpretatione should move together; the…
This connects Arabic quire structure with the economics of the paper trade. Arabic codices characteristically use quinions (five-bifolium gatherings) where Greek, Syriac, and Latin books use quaternions, and the difference is usually filed under scribal custom. The conjecture: the quinion is a…
This connects hisba-literature complaints about copyists with measurable page economics. The market inspectors' manuals warn that copyists paid by the quire enlarge their script and widen spacing to inflate the folio count. If the warning tracked real practice rather than moralist boilerplate,…
This connects Ibn al-Nadim's profession with the mortality structure of his catalogue. The Fihrist of 377 AH was compiled by a warraq from stall-level knowledge: it records inventory, including the ephemera of a living market that scholars never canonized. A title known…
This connects Islamic endowment law with the diplomatics of ownership statements. A waqf book was inalienable in perpetuity, so private possession of one was legally embarrassing: a signed, dated tamalluk note on an alienated endowment book is a confession in the owner's…
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 a demographer's instrument with scribal diplomatics. Dates recalled or reconstructed from memory heap on round numbers; dates written down on the day itself do not. A colophon is written at the moment of completion, often with weekday and month attached…
This connects the colophon's weekday with devotional time-keeping in the workshop. Completion of a copy was an event, and the khatma carried blessing; a scribe nearing the end of the final quire could steer the finish to a blessed day, and had…
This connects book provenance with demographic catastrophe. Every owner's death sends a book to the estate division and often to the market; mass mortality is therefore legible as accelerated turnover on flyleaves. The Black Death and its recurrences in the Mamluk lands…
This connects recension competition with institutional canonization dynamics. Malik's Muwatta circulated in well over a dozen riwayat; today one, that of Yahya al-Laythi, simply is the Muwatta. The conjecture: recension shares do not drift smoothly toward a winner. They show punctuated equilibrium,…
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 script choice with information control in a shared-language world. Garshuni, Arabic language in Syriac script, is usually explained as scribal habit or identity display. The conjecture: it also functioned as a soft access-control layer, keeping community texts in the common…
This connects the palimpsest census with the communal boundaries of the paper economy. Once paper was cheap, scraping parchment stopped paying for anyone who bought materials on the open market, and the Muslim urban book trade lived on that market. Monastic communities…
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,…
This connects the long Indian manuscript age with curricular divergence across the Persianate world. Manuscript production in India ran strong into the 19th century, and the Indian madrasa canon that matured in that period weighted the rational sciences, logic, philosophical theology, astronomy,…
Bibliographers use the block-carvers' names cut into margin strips merely to date and localize editions; read the same names as careers and they become labor-market data. Official printing projects paid better and audited harder, and recruited proven hands from the commercial sector…
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…
Japanese textual survival ran two opposite strategies, legible as opposite distributions in the union catalogue. Court literature survived by the vault: few, early, jealously guarded copies in aristocratic houses, where scarcity was the asset. Temple didactic literature survived by the broadcast: many…
Bestiary images descend copy by copy, but the copyist's eye corrects toward nature only where nature is available: a fox or hedgehog is re-anchored by daily perception, while a crocodile, whale, or bonnacon is pure graphic descent with no external referent. Iconographic…
Pattern sheets travelled as outline drawings with colour given verbally — the Göttingen Model Book literally writes out its recipes — while copying from a finished exemplar transmits paint by eye but forces a freehand redraw. Two transmission channels, opposite bandwidths: model-book…
Medieval painters had almost no access to antique painting or free-standing portrait sculpture, but Roman coins passed through their world by the thousand. If coinage was the operative model medium for picturing antiquity, ancient rulers should be drawn in strict numismatic profile…
Chrysography and gold-leaf image grounds drew on the same budget line, the same material stock, and the same specialist hours, and they address different audiences — the reader and the beholder. The naive luxury model says richer books have more of both;…
Rubbed-out faces in Persian and Arabic figural manuscripts are usually narrated as diffuse pious attrition accumulating across many readers. If that were so, defacement per manuscript would spread smoothly with use. But if defacement is typically one owner's single campaign through the…
Al-Sufi's Book of Fixed Stars transmits each constellation in two mirror parities — as seen in the sky and as on the celestial globe — and copies differ in how the pairing survives. Painters copy their exemplar's pictures, so parity should be…
Insular interlace obeys strict under-over alternation, and its rare violations are treated as random lapses. The conjecture: the slips are structural — they concentrate where the drawing process broke off, at panel joins, pigment-field boundaries, and day-work seams — so error positions…
Ornament in stained glass — border types, diaper grounds, grisaille foliage — is studied inside glass scholarship, but glaziers stocked their cartoon chests from painters' books. Ornament families should therefore appear in dated manuscripts before dated glass of the same region, with…
Bas-de-page drolleries look like free invention scattered at whim, but the planner's and patron's attention concentrated at the liturgical divisions, where the opening had to perform. If marginal invention is budgeted attention rather than a programme, drollery density and inventiveness should decay…
Donor portraiture is one genre under two theologies of presence. Latin donation imagery kept renegotiating scale as lay patronage broadened and purgatorial accounting personalized the stakes; the Byzantine proskynesis format was liturgically frozen. The handbook impression that donors get bigger is not…
When western Indian manuscript production moved from palm leaf to paper, pages kept palm-leaf proportions and painted vestigial string-hole medallions — that much is known. The unestablished structure is the shedding schedule: vestiges should die in a fixed order, the functional trace…
The oldest scraps of written vernacular lyric in the medieval West — Old High German charms and love-lines, early Romance snatches, the odd English couplet — turn up disproportionately as marginal and flyleaf additions. This conjecture specifies where: in grammar books (Priscian,…
Macaronic poetry — verse that switches between English, French, and Latin mid-line — flourishes in late medieval England and is usually read as learned play or preaching technique. This conjecture ties it to a duller, stronger cause: trilingual bookkeeping. The clerks who…
Books of Hours are the most-surviving books of the Middle Ages, and women are their most famous owners. This conjecture makes the link causal and general: manuscripts with documented female ownership survive with longer, denser provenance chains than equivalent male-owned books, because…
Barlaam and Josaphat, Kalila and Dimna, the Seven Sages — the frame tales Europe consumed as edifying entertainment — came west out of Eastern Christian and Islamic bookshelves. This conjecture claims the two worlds filed the same books under opposite headings, with…
Iceland wrote two great saga genres: the sober family sagas, dense with genealogy and land boundaries, and the legendary fornaldarsogur, full of dragons, berserks, and ancient kings. This conjecture links their relative copying rates to the legal value of memory: the family…
Thousands of Middle English lyrics survive in one manuscript only, while a few circulate widely, and beauty does not predict which. This conjecture proposes the engine of lyric survival was reusability in prose: poems containing proverb lines or detachable sententiae were copied…
Late medieval English households kept miscellany books — romances, recipes, bawdy tales, prayers, all sewn together. This conjecture claims those books have a systematic architecture of respectability: the first item is religious at a rate far above the book's overall religious content,…
Irish scribes are beloved for their marginal complaints — cold fingers, bad ink, wandering thoughts. This conjecture claims the grumbles are not evenly sprinkled: they cluster at codicological seams, the points where the scribe changed exemplar, resumed after an interruption, or handed…
Some Middle High German romances open by naming the patron who commissioned them; others circulate patronless. This conjecture claims the named patron measurably restricted the text's travels: patron-named romances survive in witnesses spanning fewer dialect regions than anonymous or unpatroned works of…
Medieval schoolboys learned Latin on a fixed menu of texts — Cato's Distichs, Avianus, the Auctores octo — and their copies are choked with interlinear glosses. This conjecture claims the gloss layer was the launchpad of vernacular literature in a measurable way:…
Medieval page layout carried meaning: Latin classics and university texts came in two stately columns, while humbler works ran in single column or long lines. This conjecture claims layout tracked canonization with a measurable lag for vernacular literature: a vernacular work's first-generation…