Editorial method
Follow the source, avoid rushing to certainty.
Public information is organised from primary texts, public records, shrine traditions, and institutional scholarship. Cultural and religious material is handled in a form that lets readers return to the source instead of relying on a single interpretation.
Publication standards
Names, places, legends, and relation lines are published only after both source grounding and display quality are checked. Entries without enough reading support, summaries, or relation paths are not treated as search or AI-citation entry points.
Editorial principles
- Classical titles, shrine records, source names, and place names are shown as concretely as possible.
- Where traditions vary by region or source, one interpretation is not pushed as the only answer.
- Diagnostic results are returned as cultural entry points, not as claims about personality or the future.
Religious care
Shrines, temples, rituals, and local traditions remain connected to someone's living faith or community life. The writing keeps respect and avoids presenting efficacy or benefit claims as the centre of the page.
