Muhammadzubair#1 > 19-03-2026, 11:18 AM
eggyk > 19-03-2026, 12:55 PM
tavie > 19-03-2026, 01:18 PM
Muhammadzubair#1 > 19-03-2026, 01:46 PM
pjburkshire > 19-03-2026, 02:09 PM
eggyk > 19-03-2026, 03:06 PM
(19-03-2026, 01:46 PM)Muhammadzubair#1 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Thank you for these detailed questions — they’re exactly the kind of scrutiny I hoped for.
1. Baseline chance (3–5%): This figure comes from prior statistical work (e.g., Reddy & Knight, 2011) showing that random strings under simple substitution yield valid Arabic roots at about 3–5%. I used that as the comparison baseline for blind tests. I can provide the calculation references if helpful.
2. Grammar skeleton and “qok-” words: You’re right that the skeleton defines recurring prefixes/suffixes. The key point is that these were derived statistically from Voynich text frequencies before consulting any medical sources. The “qok-” family was then tested against independent Arabic dosage formulas. So the matches aren’t just circular — they’re checked against external linguistic and medical patterns.
3. Sentence line mismatch: Good catch. The EVA transcription used in the decoding is correct (“shol cthom chor cthy”), but the figure caption mistakenly highlighted the wrong line in the folio image. That was a formatting error in Version 5 of the paper, not a change in the decoded sentence itself. I’ll correct that in the next revision.
I appreciate you pointing these out — replication and critique are the only way this hypothesis can be tested properly.
nablator > 19-03-2026, 03:28 PM
Quote:1. Baseline chance (3–5%): This figure comes from prior statistical work (e.g., Reddy & Knight, 2011) showing that random strings under simple substitution yield valid Arabic roots at about 3–5%.
Rafal > 19-03-2026, 03:35 PM
Quote:After three rounds of independent peer review...
eggyk > 19-03-2026, 06:09 PM
(19-03-2026, 11:18 AM)Muhammadzubair#1 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Important methodological note: EVA is a glyph-labeling system, not a phonetic transcription. No argument in this paper claims that an EVA token matches an Arabic word because they look or sound similar. All such phonetic reasoning is explicitly avoided.
(19-03-2026, 11:18 AM)Muhammadzubair#1 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.No human peer review was conducted prior to posting.
(19-03-2026, 11:18 AM)Muhammadzubair#1 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.This research was conducted with assistance from Claude (Anthropic) and Grok for corpus analysis and text drafting. Research direction, source selection, and analytical framework were provided by the author.
Koen G > 19-03-2026, 06:36 PM