(15-12-2022, 08:14 AM)Ruby Novacna Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.You underline here the known difficulties, if they did not exist the text would have been deciphered long ago.
In addition to Marco's response, I would argue that 'inconsistency in grammar' is not a difficulty or problem of the MS text, but a difficulty/problem of proposed solutions.
(15-12-2022, 10:54 AM)MarcoP Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view....this old basic method has been debunked so many times during the last century. Simple substitutions failed over and over again with several European languages, Greek included,
... Research can follow three other directions:
[*]A simple substitution / phonetic rendering...
I don't quite understand your logic, Marco.
(16-12-2022, 01:10 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.In addition to Marco's response, I would argue that 'inconsistency in grammar' is not a difficulty or problem of the MS text, but a difficulty/problem of proposed solutions.
Thanks, Rene, it's good to know that the grammatical difficulties are not related to the text itself.
(15-12-2022, 10:54 AM)MarcoP Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Simple substitutions failed over and over again with several European languages, Greek included, and we know why. As you say, if this simple method worked, the text would have been deciphered long ago.
Simple substitutions of European languages are therefore excluded. Research can follow three other directions:
- ...
- ...
- A simple substitution / phonetic rendering of an artificial language or possibly an exotic language (e.g. a monosyllabic language, as proposed by Stolfi).
(16-12-2022, 06:11 PM)Ruby Novacna Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I don't quite understand your logic, Marco.
The logic is not complex. Simple substitutions preserve most of the statistical features of the source language, for instance character conditional entropy, the binomial distribution of word lengths, consecutive repetition of words. The source language must therefore match the values of these properties observed in the VMS. European languages don't match these properties and are therefore ruled out for a simple substitution.
On the other hand, an artificial language is purely hypothetical and we cannot exclude that one was invented that showed these features. The case for exotic languages is less clear: You are not allowed to view links.
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Login to view. discussed how some Eastern languages have a similar word-length distribution as the VMS. You are not allowed to view links.
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Login to view. posted an example of the amazing rate of apparent repetition in Chinese (when rendered with the Latin alphabet). A modern writing system for Vietnamese (VIQR) mentioned by Stolfi results in character entropy values comparable with those of the VMS.
The following plot shows conditional character entropy (X) and distance (RMSE) of token lengths from the binomial distribution (Y). Viet VIQR is the blue diamond that appears within the cloud of pink Voynich samples.
Green samples are Greek texts and yellow are Latin and Romance languages. Three-letters labels correspond to samples from You are not allowed to view links.
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attachment=7097]
These three plots compare the distribution of token lengths in Cham's Greek sample ("History of Animals" by Aristotle), VIQR Vietnamese and CUVA-encoded Herbal B. As can be seen, Greek has a peak for 3 character long words and a "fat" tail made of longer words. Viet and Voynichese peak at 4 characters and are nearly symmetrical, with fewer short words and longer words than Greek (EVA results in a similar shape, but with a peak at 5 characters instead of 4). Other European languages show distributions similar to Greek.
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attachment=7096]
It is well possible that Eastern languages could be dismissed by some other quantitative feature: there are few Voynich researchers from East Asia and we collectively lack knowledge about these languages. But the case for an artificial language is so speculative that I cannot think of any way to dismiss it.
Thank you, Marco, for your explanations.
So it's not the method that doesn't work, but rather that the few researchers who try to apply it have not yet been successful?
(17-12-2022, 06:49 PM)Ruby Novacna Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Thank you, Marco, for your explanations.
So it's not the method that doesn't work, but rather that the few researchers who try to apply it have not yet been successful?
What Marco is saying, and I fully agree with him, is that the method doesn't work.
As a consequence, naturally, those who tried to apply it all failed.
This logic does not automatically exclude two things:
- languages like Arabic or Hebrew. More cases that could have been used in early 15th c Europe may exist.
- methods other than simple substitution of a plain text in any language
The combination: classical Greek and simple substitution will not work.
I am aware that there is not just one 'classical Greek' but there is a whole range of languages and/or dialects.
They are all excluded.
(18-12-2022, 01:28 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The combination: classical Greek and simple substitution will not work.
I am aware that there is not just one 'classical Greek' but there is a whole range of languages and/or dialects.
They are all excluded.
But Ruby does not advocate a "simple" substitution or any specific language/dialect.
(18-12-2022, 09:44 AM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (18-12-2022, 01:28 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The combination: classical Greek and simple substitution will not work.
I am aware that there is not just one 'classical Greek' but there is a whole range of languages and/or dialects.
They are all excluded.
But Ruby does not advocate a "simple" substitution or any specific language/dialect.
From what I have seen, it is not fundamentally different from a simple substitution.
There is just a lot of variability in mapping Voynich characters to Greek, which is needed to obtain a sufficient number of valid Greek words. That is characteristic of all similar attempts, by the way.
As an example, taken from Patrick Feaster's post:
Quote:3. daiin = των, "the" (masculine accusative)
10. aiin = οὖν, "therefore"
(18-12-2022, 10:27 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.There is just a lot of variability in mapping Voynich characters to Greek, which is needed to obtain a sufficient number of valid Greek words. That is characteristic of all similar attempts, by the way.
As an example, taken from Patrick Feaster's post:
Quote:3. daiin = των, "the" (masculine accusative)
10. aiin = οὖν, "therefore"
Rene, you could form an opinion about my work by visiting my blog and not based on someone else's opinion. What Patrick Feaster wrote did not come from my blog, he wrote it on his own, probably thinking he copied it correctly.
(18-12-2022, 10:27 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.From what I have seen, it is not fundamentally different from a simple substitution.
It does not preserve word length or entropy.
q = δ
d = θ/τ/δ
s = σ/ς/ζ
a = α/αι
e = ε/ι/ω/αι
o = ο/α
ee = υ/αι
al = αλ/αι
ol = α/αλ/αι
y = ε/η/αι/ης/ος/ως
ch = γ/κ/ϝ
Sh = κ/σκ/σχ
k = ν/μ
n = ν
...