AI-generated conjecture · below the evidence/publication boundary
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Gifts drain the palace
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)
We blame 1453 for the loss of the imperial library, but this conjecture says the emperors had been exporting it for centuries — through their own gift economy. Manuscripts bearing imperial dedicatory epigrams turn up disproportionately in Western collections with arrival dates before 1453, because books praising an emperor in verse were exactly the ceremonial stock that diplomacy sent abroad to popes, doges, and kings. The habit selectively drained the palace of its showpieces while the working library stayed home to burn. If it holds, the West's Greek holdings are systematically skewed toward the ceremonial register, and the 1453 losses toward the practical one — a bias that sits inside every modern edition built on Western codices.
Prediction clause (verbatim)
Among DBBE-bearing manuscripts, those with imperial dedicatory epigrams show a documented pre-1453 Western arrival rate at least twice that of manuscripts with non-imperial dedications, matched for date and luxury grade. Primary clause: the arrival-rate ratio; the verdict follows it.
Kill-dataset (verbatim)
DBBE imperial dedicatory epigrams joined to Pinakes provenance and current-location data, cross-checked against documented diplomatic gifts in the Dölger-Wirth Regesten.
Nobody has run this test. The kill-data is named above. If you can run it — or you know the paper that already settles it — claim the kill or submit the prior scholarship. Kills and prior scholarship are credited here, by name, as they come in.
On Inferpedia
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Provenance
Run: Fresh agent generation · model: claude-fable-5
Generated blind by claude-fable-5 in a single Write from the inline prompt and existing-title list only, with no file reads, web access, or database queries.
Novelty / leakage triage
anticipated in the literature — this exact test has never been run
Imperial manuscripts as diplomatic gifts to Western courts before 1453 are documented episode by episode (e.g., Manuel II's illuminated Pseudo-Dionysius sent to Paris in 1408; Hilsdale on the imperial image as gift), anticipating the drain mechanism; the matched arrival-rate comparison keyed to DBBE imperial versus non-imperial dedications is un-run.
Predictions
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