LisaFaginDavis > 05-10-2024, 01:38 PM
Ruby Novacna > 05-10-2024, 02:19 PM
(05-10-2024, 01:07 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view....this is a scientific publication by the professional author of "the historian's toolbox",
asteckley > 05-10-2024, 07:58 PM
(05-10-2024, 01:38 PM)LisaFaginDavis Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.In no world could you argue that "paper" is a synonym for "parchment" or "vellum." It isn't just that paper "suggests" a pulp-based, pressed, and dried substrate. It's that paper IS a pulp-based, pressed, and dried substrate. That is a serious error, especially for someone trying to argue that the manuscript is a fake. If he wants to make a serious argument about the material evidence, as he does, this carelessness immediately suggests that we should not be taking that part of his argument seriously. If you need a more generic term that covers both paper and parchment, the right term would be "substrate" or "writing material."
I don't want to be the kind of person who tosses out an entire book based on what might have been just a careless mistake, but in this case, the error has implications for the rest of his argument and implies that he hasn't really done the reading or understood some fairly important details about the physical reality of the manuscript.
BessAgritianin > 06-10-2024, 08:49 AM
(04-10-2024, 01:35 PM)proto57 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Many who believe the Voynich IS fifteenth century think the plants may be fake also, as in some sort of hoax to either sell the Voynich for more money, or puff up the reputation of a doctor who owned it, and so on. In fact, if one thinks the plants real, and not a hoax, that opens the possibility of the very excellent comparisons made by Janick and Tucker (and others) to New World varieties. So "fake plants" might fit better with old, than it does with newer. If real plants, then comparisons must necessarily compete with post-Columbian identifications.
I do not think anyone has determined the pharmacy sections show names of roots... but let's say, for the sake of argument, it does. Can we not label a fake root with a fake or real name? I mean, labeling a root does not make it a real root, I don't think.
Rich.
LisaFaginDavis > 06-10-2024, 01:51 PM
(05-10-2024, 07:58 PM)asteckley Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(05-10-2024, 01:38 PM)LisaFaginDavis Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.In no world could you argue that "paper" is a synonym for "parchment" or "vellum." It isn't just that paper "suggests" a pulp-based, pressed, and dried substrate. It's that paper IS a pulp-based, pressed, and dried substrate. That is a serious error, especially for someone trying to argue that the manuscript is a fake. If he wants to make a serious argument about the material evidence, as he does, this carelessness immediately suggests that we should not be taking that part of his argument seriously. If you need a more generic term that covers both paper and parchment, the right term would be "substrate" or "writing material."
I don't want to be the kind of person who tosses out an entire book based on what might have been just a careless mistake, but in this case, the error has implications for the rest of his argument and implies that he hasn't really done the reading or understood some fairly important details about the physical reality of the manuscript.
Perhaps "no world" ... except those outside the ivory towers of academia. But, In any case, Williams did not argue they were synonymous. He merely used it as a description. He obviously knows that it isn't pulp-paper or he wouldn't have used the term "calfskin paper".
But the more important point is that it is not relevant to his thesis or even to his competency. For all we know, he made the choice intentionally because he thought it better for his popular auduence. (This was not a scientific paper.) Not a choice I would make, but again -- irrelevant.
There are plenty of reasons to conclude he did not give the whole subject adequate treatment to support his forgery case-- this misuse of the word paper just isn't one if them.
And anyone treating it as one is trying too hard to just find things to criticize. Doing so comes across as petty and undermines the credibility of the critic more than that of Williams.
proto57 > 06-10-2024, 03:28 PM
(06-10-2024, 08:49 AM)BessAgritianin Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(04-10-2024, 01:35 PM)proto57 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Many who believe the Voynich IS fifteenth century think the plants may be fake also, as in some sort of hoax to either sell the Voynich for more money, or puff up the reputation of a doctor who owned it, and so on. In fact, if one thinks the plants real, and not a hoax, that opens the possibility of the very excellent comparisons made by Janick and Tucker (and others) to New World varieties. So "fake plants" might fit better with old, than it does with newer. If real plants, then comparisons must necessarily compete with post-Columbian identifications.
I do not think anyone has determined the pharmacy sections show names of roots... but let's say, for the sake of argument, it does. Can we not label a fake root with a fake or real name? I mean, labeling a root does not make it a real root, I don't think.
Rich.
It seems to me like a mirage, we return always at our starting position without finding anything.
All the students of the manuscript from 1945 till present accepted the facts about authenticity of around 14-th century ink and velum. And it was proved so. If the components of the ink do not correspond to the known libraries of 14 centuries manuscripts- this is making it still more interesting. Don't forget that the manuscript is not likely any other and is unique.
If the plants were fake, then why the faker has included also some well known plants- irrefutably identified like the three colour violet- f9v, water lily -f2v, etc. for me there are at least three more identified plants.
And they are not post-Columbian. The authorship explains the plants. Here again I do not to post the name, unless some fiction author steals the idea.
O yes, there are authentic roots with their names in the pharmacy part like Arum and two others (again identified by me).
And at last my question to all who support the forgery theory:
If it is a forgery- is it a meaningless nonsense, or a coded old manuscript?
The meaningless nonsense is repudiated by the marginalia, whose readings of 116v and 17r I have posted in this blog. They prove professionalism and deep knowledge of the writer/user as good healer or doctor- which qualities do not correspond to Voynich.
Also the whole manuscript is interleaved with several different sections, like herbal, pharmacy, astrology, etc. for which to be faked one needs to be a genius.
And at last if it really be a forgery - which is the document from which was copied to be created? What is the provenience and underlying language of the forgery?
BR: Vessy
nablator > 06-10-2024, 03:53 PM
(05-10-2024, 08:41 AM)asteckley Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Williams' Voynich work is certainly amatuerish and ill-informed, and on the topic of the Voynich MS, it's essentially useless. So there are a lot of substantive flaws in his work to criticize; his use of the word "paper" is probably not one of them.
asteckley > 07-10-2024, 12:53 AM
(06-10-2024, 01:51 PM)LisaFaginDavis Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.It's not a question of "ivory tower" vs "popular". It's "accuracy" vs. "inaccuracy." It's misleading to use terminology that is simply wrong. If you don't know the correct term for something, look it up! In any kind of scholarship, regardless of the audience, it is quite possible to both avoid pretension and use accurate descriptive terms.
asteckley > 07-10-2024, 01:09 AM
(06-10-2024, 03:53 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I disagree with your characterization of this work as "amateurish and ill-informed".
(06-10-2024, 03:53 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I don't care about the use of proper terminology, this is not an issue since the physical makeup of the VM and its contents are not the subject of the book.
...
The real problem, for me, is the absence of critical thinking. There is only the forgery by "Wilfred" Voynich narrative, no examination of evidence for/against it. It feels one-sided, biased and unfinished. I don't expect neutrality, I just want to understand why such a definitive statement is made.
R. Sale > 07-10-2024, 06:29 PM