matildarose > 2 hours ago
(3 hours ago)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(3 hours ago)Rafal Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.And many of those are hapaxes (words that occur only once). How could you have deduced their meaning, since it seems that you still don't know precisely what the language is? (Romance and Latin are very different things. For one thing, Romance has no cases...)Quote:In the meantime, go ahead and ask ChatGPT to build you a 12,000-entry dictionary with 99.67% corpus coverage.What are your entries? Words? That makes some problem because Voynich manuscript has only about 8000 unique words.
All the best, --stolfi
PS. And I bet that if I asked ChatGPT to create a 12,000 entry dictionary with 99.67% coverage of the VMS lexicon, it would not blink once and say "Sure! Here it is ...."
PPS. There is a lot more than 1% of errors in the VMS, including words split in half, joined words, words with illegible or ambiguous glyphs, etc. So if your lexicon has 99.67% coverage, that alone says "bullshit"...
matildarose > 2 hours ago
rikforto > 2 hours ago
DG97EEB > 1 hour ago
(3 hours ago)matildarose Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(3 hours ago)tavie Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Which chatbot did you use to develop this?
I built the analysis pipelines myself... 171 phases of corpus linguistics, morphological parsers, n-gram frequency analysis, Zipf validation, entropy calculation, and cross-reference engines. The statistical framework includes binomial probability testing, Fisher's method for combined p-values, and control corpus comparison. The interpretation was mine. If you'd like to challenge the methodology, I'm happy to go line by line.
In the meantime, go ahead and ask ChatGPT to build you a 12,000-entry dictionary with 99.67% corpus coverage. Let me know how that goes![]()
Go ahead—ask ChatGPT to build you a 12,000-entry dictionary with 99.67% corpus coverage. Let me know how that goes.
Jorge_Stolfi > 1 hour ago
(2 hours ago)matildarose Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.What I consider supported by quantitative evidence:I can't accept these claims until I know what they mean.
| Latin phonetic correspondences | Control corpus comparison against medieval pharmaceutical texts | 80% terminology overlap (p < 0.001) |
| Medieval source alignment | Cross-reference with Canon of Medicine and 14 other texts | 1,247 terms matched |
Quote:| Case system (3 grammatical cases) | Distributional analysis of suffix patterns | 227× nominative vs 196× accusative for "dream" root alone—distinct distributions |Ditto.
Quote:| Morphological rule consistency | 500 random compounds tested against documented rules | 97.4% compliance |Ditto.
Quote:What remains interpretive
DG97EEB > 1 hour ago
(3 hours ago)matildarose Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The Voynich Manuscript is not a cipher—it is a technical notation system: medieval Latin botanical terms written phonetically, integrated with Arabic medicine and Neoplatonic philosophy.
The script is not random. It has grammar:
- At least three grammatical cases
- Numerical prefixes with semantic meaning
- Systematic morpheme composition
This is not glossolalia. This is not cipher. This is language.
I found the system.
The most common word appears 1,847 times and means exactly what you'd expect in a medical-alchemical text.
The biological section's "bathing nymphs" aren't women—they're diagrams of something else entirely.
The circular astronomical diagrams aren't just calendars. They're instructions.
The manuscript has a core formula. Can you guess what's in it?
Koen G > 42 minutes ago