A philological record of the soul’s vocabulary.
Greek: Homer through Plotinus, the scriptures in Greek · Latin: Plautus through late antiquity, via Perseus · Hebrew: the Tanakh, aligned to the Septuagint · a receipt on every claim
AI-generated answers from an audited corpus — absent words return not attested, and every claim carries a receipt.
Far more common in Homer. θυμός is a working organ of the Homeric self — anger, courage, and appetite lodged in one breathing seat — and the epics carry it at a rate the philosophical prose never approaches. In Plato the word is worn down to a technical term, one part of the tripartite soul rather than the whole life of a person.
Aristotle revives θυμός where Plato sidelines it — worth pulling that thread.
From the record: the terms most often carved into the same line as the lemma. Size follows frequency — the nearest company reads largest.
co-occurrence within the line · from the conceptual map · receipt
For agents and researchers: the corpus answers over the API and MCP, grounded in an audited corpus — absent words return not attested, and every claim carries a receipt.