Emma May Smith > 11-08-2024, 09:46 AM
(11-08-2024, 01:51 AM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.My hypothesis is that spaces are inserted into a continuous stream of glyphs to make it easier to parse, but that they don't add any information beyond that, much like the commas in the numeral 1,234,567. But it's just a hypothesis, and it could certainly be tested more robustly than I've tried to do. I have not, for example, experimented to see what would happen if a space were treated as another option in transitional probability matrices. I also haven't tried to work out or model any "rules" for spacing that extend beyond the single glyphs to either side of each potential breakpoint. There's a lot more that could be investigated here.
nablator > 11-08-2024, 10:15 AM
(11-08-2024, 01:51 AM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I suppose it's possible that the transcriber may -- consciously or unconsciously -- have factored knowledge of which glyphs do and don't typically have spaces between them into decisions about which breaks to mark as ambiguous.
nablator > 11-08-2024, 11:41 AM
pfeaster Wrote:One intriguing hypothesis these observations suggest to me is that the default behavior of
Voynichese really is to repeat by looping in particular predictable ways. The less information any
given sequence encodes—which is to say, the less entropy it displays—the more closely it would then
conform to these default loops, and the more conspicuously repetitive it might appear. Conversely, the
more information it encodes, the more the looping pattern might give way to meaningful signal.
Torsten > 11-08-2024, 01:00 PM
(11-08-2024, 09:46 AM)Emma May Smith Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I think the problem I have is squaring this with how spaces are distributed. Some glyphs demand spaces---before [q] and after [n]---some glyphs reject spaces---after [ch] or (mostly) before [e]---while others have no strong preference. I suppose this can be put down to the scribe's esthetic sense, but it would need to be shared by all five scribes. As the first two options don't change throughout the text, only the last of the three options is under their control in the way you describe.
(11-08-2024, 09:46 AM)Emma May Smith Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I suppose this can be put down to the scribe's esthetic sense, but it would need to be shared by all five scribes.
Koen G > 11-08-2024, 01:33 PM
(11-08-2024, 01:00 PM)Torsten Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Indeed, the uniformity of these patterns throughout the text weakens the hypothesis of multiple scribes.
ReneZ > 11-08-2024, 01:43 PM
Aga Tentakulus > 11-08-2024, 02:08 PM
Torsten > 11-08-2024, 02:41 PM
(11-08-2024, 01:33 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.If anything I'd say it strengthens the hypothesis of a coordinated workshop environment or something similar. Despite the many differences (dialects? continuum?), the core of Voynichese is still a system which supposes some degree of coordination or at least imitation between scribes.
(11-08-2024, 01:33 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.This would be like saying that two different handwritings in a legal document are by the same scribe because they use similar elongated ascenders. The correct explanation would obviously be that both scribes received similar training and worked in a similar environment.
pfeaster > 11-08-2024, 03:11 PM
(11-08-2024, 09:46 AM)Emma May Smith Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I think the problem I have is squaring this with how spaces are distributed. Some glyphs demand spaces---before [q] and after [n]---some glyphs reject spaces---after [ch] or (mostly) before [e]---while others have no strong preference. I suppose this can be put down to the scribe's esthetic sense, but it would need to be shared by all five scribes. As the first two options don't change throughout the text, only the last of the three options is under their control in the way you describe.
(11-08-2024, 09:46 AM)Emma May Smith Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I agree that the spaces may well not be informational---they're either too determined or too optional---but they still could be meaningful. That is, they tell us about the method of creation rather than the content of the message.
Emma May Smith > 11-08-2024, 03:19 PM