ReneZ > 08-03-2026, 02:07 AM
Jorge_Stolfi > 08-03-2026, 07:11 AM
(07-03-2026, 03:49 PM)proto57 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Hi Jorge: Actually, four samples from four bifolios (bifolia?) were radiocarbon dated by Greg Hodgins of the University of Arizona, not only one.
Quote:by the most rare and fortuitous chance... I had my camera turned on and ready during Greg's lecture at the Voynich 100 Conference in Frascati, Italy, in 2012, and quickly snapped this picture
Quote:Well I must point out that, while you may have arrived independently at the "Book Switch" idea... which, by the way, I find plausible (NTIM)... it was actually Andrew Steckley (asteckley here, of course) who first proposed it, some months or more earlier. He discussed it on Ninjas some time ago.
Quote:But I hope that does not affect your 15% assessment of the idea!
Jorge_Stolfi > 08-03-2026, 08:01 AM
(08-03-2026, 02:07 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.What strikes me about the diagram is, that the boxes are green and yellow, but there are no boxes in red, which would mean: "there is no evidence supporting this statement", or purple, which would mean: "there is evidence contradicting this statement".
These colours would be needed if one were to add the following events:
"Voynich added a fake signature to the first page of the MS"
"Voynich knew who was Jacobus de Tepenec before 1920"
"Voynich knew what Jacobus' signature looked like, before 1920"
Koen G > 08-03-2026, 10:58 AM
ReneZ > 08-03-2026, 11:23 AM
(08-03-2026, 08:01 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Indeed there is no direct evidence for those claims.
proto57 > 08-03-2026, 04:10 PM
(08-03-2026, 07:11 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.So they sampled folios f8, f26, f47, and f68. I understand that "before present" is actually before 1950-01-01. So, according to that slide, the date for f68 would 1400±35, and that for f8 is 1460±37. That would indeed be a puzzling discrepancy.
But that slide is misleading. I have now seen the actual calibration dates. It turns out that, because of a geophysical hiccup around 1400, the measurement of each sample yielded two separate estimates, each with its own range and probability:
f8 1334± 7 3% 1426±32 92%
f26 1335±14 12% 1419±28 83%
f47 1334±10 7% 1420±28 88%
f68 1335±27 42% 1410±25 52%
"Rich, from Myth Wrote:Folio 8: 490±37, which works out to 1423 to 1497
Folio 26: 514±35, which works out to 1401 to 1471
Folio 47: 506±35, which works out to 1409 to 1479
Folio 68 (cleaned): 550±35, which works out to 1365 to 1435
Quote:So a better way of reading those results seems to be:
If we assume that all four folios came from the same batch, the date for that batch is about 1420±25 with 90% probability (sorry, rough math here -- too tired now do the proper computation).
But If we assume that the folios may have come from different batches, like scavenged from old books or from various "reject" bins, there is ~50% probability that folio f68 was made in 1335±30, while the other three were made around 1420; and ~50% probability that all four folios were made around 1420. In both cases, the dates around 1420 could possibly be 10 years apart or more.
I don't see any objective way to choose between those two priors. I still think that there is a good chance that the Author used vellum that was already decades old at the time...
Quote:The anomalous date and range for f68 on that slide resulted from the "simplification" of combining the two ranges into a single range. (Imagine that you had the photos of four animals and are asked to estimate their weights. On three of the pictures the animal is clearly a dog so you say "5±2 kg". The fourth picture is blurry so it could be either a dog or a horse. Rather than say "5±2 kg with 50% chance, 500±200 with 50% chance", you "simplify" the answer by saying "300±250 kg"...)
proto57 Wrote:by the most rare and fortuitous chance... I had my camera turned on and ready during Greg's lecture at the Voynich 100 Conference in Frascati, Italy, in 2012, and quickly snapped this picture
"Jorg Wrote:Indeed I was there and I remember that talk. (I think that the C14 date and Rafal Prinke's biographical info about Barschius were the two notable results presented at that conference. Were there any others?) But I did not take a picture, and did not remember that there were four samples, alas...
eggyk > 08-03-2026, 05:30 PM
(08-03-2026, 07:11 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.But that slide is misleading. I have now seen the actual calibration dates. It turns out that, because of a geophysical hiccup around 1400, the measurement of each sample yielded two separate estimates, each with its own range and probability:
f8 1334± 7 3% 1426±32 92%
f26 1335±14 12% 1419±28 83%
f47 1334±10 7% 1420±28 88%
f68 1335±27 42% 1410±25 52%
"Rich, from Myth Wrote:Folio 8: 490±37, which works out to 1423 to 1497
Folio 26: 514±35, which works out to 1401 to 1471
Folio 47: 506±35, which works out to 1409 to 1479
Folio 68 (cleaned): 550±35, which works out to 1365 to 1435
(08-03-2026, 07:11 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.If we assume that all four folios came from the same batch, the date for that batch is about 1420±25 with 90% probability (sorry, rough math here -- too tired now do the proper computation). But
If we assume that the folios may have come from different batches, like scavenged from old books or from various "reject" bins, there is ~50% probability that folio f68 was made in 1335±30, while the other three were made around 1420; and ~50% probability that all four folios were made around 1420. In both cases, the dates around 1420 could possibly be 10 years apart or more.
asteckley > 08-03-2026, 06:35 PM
(08-03-2026, 05:30 PM)eggyk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The merging/averaging of the different C14 results by treating the different folios as "a single object measured 4 times" is, in my opinion, nonsense. They are different pieces of parchment, and could very well have been created decades apart from eachother.
eggyk > 08-03-2026, 07:31 PM
(08-03-2026, 06:35 PM)asteckley Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Well it's not completely nonsense -- There is a straightforward and mathematically precise approach to combine the probability distributions to form a proper combined distribution. It does, however, require additional information (without which, one must resort to the adopting of specific assumptions.). Once one adopts the specific assumption that the separate samples are all from a single source (i.e. all the parchment samples are indeed from the same animal slaughter), then the mathematical combination of probabilities is deterministic. But the technicians really should have been explicit about the fact that this was an adopted assumption, and that it is under that specific assumption (and only under it), that a combined probability distribution can be derived.
asteckley > 08-03-2026, 10:27 PM
(08-03-2026, 10:58 AM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Relying on paleography to assign a manuscript to a time and place (however narrow or broad) is standard practice. You'd be surprised how often the date range provided in library catalogs is based on stylistic analysis of the handwriting alone. The most recent assessment by a professional paleographer (LFD) confirms that the marginalia were written during the (first half of the) 15th century. This is crucial and reliable information.