Dunsel > 1 hour ago
(11 hours ago)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.So shedy eats shol?
Regarding the shuffling of pages, this is understood to have happened afterwards, possibly by someone who did not know everything about the MS. Accidentally bound out of order seems more likely than intentionally shuffled.
Edit to add: I cannot understand why the study of glyphs is being discouraged. The manuscript is made of glyphs. Study them and you may understand it better.
oshfdk > 1 hour ago
(2 hours ago)Dunsel Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.You are correct. Two random tuples would produce exactly that. But you forgot the boolean. That chart is not measuring 2 things, it's measuring 3. So, taking your same tuple math with a random boolean attached, I get this.
That is not what my chart shows.
Quote:The 0ed half, which included pages where it never occurred or it occurred once in hapax token, and the ed+ "half" where it occurred at least once and was not in a hapax token.
Dunsel > 1 hour ago
(11 hours ago)oshfdk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(11 hours ago)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.When solving a cipher (and by extension any textual mystery) you need to attack the odd things that stand out. There is the weakness.
I don't think I can name many things about the Voynich MS that don't stand out. Who knows, maybe it's not an elephant, but a porcupine, focusing on the longest quills may not get us closer to the truth.
oshfdk > 1 hour ago
(1 hour ago)Dunsel Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.So I don't know if it's an elephant or a porcupine. But, if I look at those quills, I may not be able to identify it as a porcupine, but I'll be pretty certain it's not an elephant. Only by eliminating the impossible can you then see what's possible. Now if I'm looking at the longest quills, then I know it's a porcupine and I'm trying to identify the species. So far, nobody can even agree on if it's any animal we know.
Dunsel > 1 hour ago
(1 hour ago)oshfdk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.But why attach a random boolean? As far as I understand, the boolean in your chart is not random, but some metric that depends on the variables.
(1 hour ago)oshfdk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.So, it appears this is a simple cutoff filter on one of the variables? What would the random tuples chart show if the background color was selected as A < 5, for example?
oshfdk > 1 hour ago
(1 hour ago)Dunsel Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.My chart only looks at 3 things, if the page has (0 ed or 1 ed in a hapax) or (ed>2 or in a non hapax) that's the boolean. The normalized count of ho and the count of ed per page are the two variables. There is no numeric cutoff applied to ho or ed density. There is no threshold on the plotted variables. There is no constant added as a filter. Again, I'm no mathematician, but if you can find some functional dependency between a random boolean and the sort key, I'm all ears. That would explain your hypothesis.
Dunsel > 1 hour ago
(1 hour ago)oshfdk Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The sorting key is (ed/ho), the boolean is ed < 2 (or <= 2, from your comment it's not clear what happens if ed equals 2). To me this looks like they are obviously dependent in a straightforward way. If ed < 2 the value of ed/ho will be low for most values of ho.