oshfdk > 01-08-2025, 08:31 AM
(01-08-2025, 01:07 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Two important things that people should keep in mind when doing this sort of analysis, on this page or anywhere else:
(1) The Author of the manuscript (who invented the script, chose the book contents, composed the text, etc) is not the same person as the Scribe(s) who actually wrote the manuscript on the vellum.
...
(2) Over the 600 years after the VMS was created, a lot of the original writing and drawing, on many pages, faded almost to the point of invisibility, or beyond. Seeing that, at least one of the later owners undertook to restore the book by retracing the faded parts. And there may have been another owner, even later, who extended this restoration a bit further.
oshfdk > 01-08-2025, 08:46 AM
(01-08-2025, 07:31 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Look closer Real close. Dowload the full resolution jpeg form Beinecke and
look at it with 200% magnification and play with the color curves:
You should see a very very very faint h (only a lttle fainter than the y of pchhy at 05:30 on the outer ring). Making that weirdo at 07:00 into a perfeclty normal ch.
Yavernoxia > 01-08-2025, 08:49 AM
(01-08-2025, 08:46 AM)oshfdk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I don't see any stroke on either of the images posted. It's pareidolia, if you concentrate hard enough, you can see anything I guess(01-08-2025, 07:31 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Look closer Real close. Dowload the full resolution jpeg form Beinecke and
look at it with 200% magnification and play with the color curves:
You should see a very very very faint h (only a lttle fainter than the y of pchhy at 05:30 on the outer ring). Making that weirdo at 07:00 into a perfeclty normal ch.
I just took your enhancement. With the right amount of squinting, yes, one can see a stroke that would normally start the downward part of h (image A). However, with the same amount of squinting one can also see many other lines (image B). So, I don't think this proves that there is an intentional faded stroke there, it seems equally likely it's just the brain trying to fill in the blanks.
Jorge_Stolfi > 01-08-2025, 09:32 AM
oshfdk > 01-08-2025, 09:53 AM
(01-08-2025, 09:32 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Admitted, my "must" in that post is like in "the Egyptians must have drawn detailed plans of the Pyramids on paper before they started building them". It does not mean "it is a fact that", but rather "it is highly likely based on logic and common sense".
And "surely" in English, bizarrely, means the same thing, or even worse. "The package surely has been shipped" is a somewhat less reassuring message than "the package must have been shipped", which is a lot less reassuring than "the package was shipped".
Whether you believe that Voynichese is an exotic or invented language, a complicated cipher, or an elaborate hoax, it is very unlikely that five European scribes would understand the text; much less the illustrations. So at least N-1 of the N scribes "must" have been just copying what they saw as a mere string of symbols and weird diagrams. Like I would do if I had to copy a Greek manuscript: I know the alphabet, but would not understand anything of the text, not even the most basic words. And thus I would not even notice if I write a nu instead of an upsilon, or a xi instead of a zeta; or if I skip a iota, or join two words that were meant to be separate, or split what was meant to be a single word...
Apart from that, there are several clues in the VMS that the Scribe did not understand what he or she was writing, whether in text or diagrams. Like the mis-aligned text in two columns on f34r, or the missing nymphs and stars in some Zodiac pages. For instance, here is a description of page f72r2 (Gemini) that I wrote years ago:
ReneZ > 01-08-2025, 10:30 AM
oshfdk > 01-08-2025, 12:16 PM
(01-08-2025, 10:30 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I think that a good argument can be made that there is a single 'brain' behind this MS, which one can consider a single creator or author.
The 2022 conference paper of Elona Dunkin and Klaus Schmeh even put this in a historical perspective.
Koen G > 01-08-2025, 12:27 PM
(01-08-2025, 12:16 PM)oshfdk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.But as far as the text and images go, for what I know, the Voynich MS has a very strange combination of features, so it's not clear if there is any use comparing it with other contemporary manuscripts.
Jorge_Stolfi > 01-08-2025, 01:17 PM
(01-08-2025, 12:16 PM)oshfdk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.But generally, this is a variation of "other <...> were made in a certain way, hence the Voynich MS probably was made in the same way", which can be a good argument, for example, for some physical properties of the book, because there are quite a few other manuscripts that are physically similar.
Jorge_Stolfi > 01-08-2025, 02:09 PM
(01-08-2025, 12:16 PM)oshfdk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I assume the paper is this one: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
[...] First of all, the number of authors is not known for 59% of the sample set, so even as an extrapolation the argument is not very good.