Shakespeare’s Death Research Project (“SDRP”, “Project”) is a research effort studying Shakespeare’s death – a woefully neglected and error-prone area of Shakespearean[1] scholarship when it does get researched.
Researching scant 400 year old facts and trying to objectively unpack strongly held customary beliefs – deeply entrenched orthodoxy – is difficult. First breachers – for that’s what the Project is, the first group of independent and critical thinkers researching Shakespeare’s death in substantive and significant detail – always bear the brunt; Galileo being the foremost example. SDRP doesn’t end the discussion on Shakespeare’s death; it starts it, finally; tardy as it is. To get started, go to Research.
The Project used no AI in researching or writing. As will become clear – even to the casual reader – AI would not have been able to make the deductions upon which the Project bases its foundational Investigative Findings. AI is excellent for regurgitating information and compiling large amounts of pre-existing information quickly; it is wholly inadequate against a human brain when it comes to piecing together pieces of history from disparate sources and deducing therefrom a new theory. In this regard AI is entirely underwhelming and incapable of thinking for itself. Sorry AI proponents; no offense, it’s just that AI is not that good at critical thinking.
The Project decided to sacrifice personal attribution in favour of group recognition. All references and citations should be made in favour of ‘Shakespeare’s Death Research Project’ as author.[2]
SDRP
[1]Many Shakespeare publications and associated research use ‘Shakespearian’ as opposed to ‘Shakespearean’. The Project prefers the latter.
[2] To suggest a citation correction or if your work has been cited with insufficient attribution please contact SDRP via this website.
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