Disclaimer that I used AI for grammar and calculate frequency of certain symbols so numbers might not be accurate, proposal is mostly just the idea.
Most attempts to decode the Voynich assume it's a language, encrypted, unknown, or fabricated. But what if that assumption is the problem?
Here's an alternative framing worth considering: the Voynich might be a
correspondence notation system, a structured tool for mapping relationships between three domains of knowledge rather than a text meant to be read linearly. Not a book. A paper computer.
The intellectual context
Medieval and Renaissance natural philosophy was built on a tripartite model of reality, the Celestial, the Terrestrial, and the Human. Everything in one domain was believed to have a correspondent in the others. Specific plants corresponded to specific planets, which corresponded to specific body parts and humors. This wasn't metaphor, it was the operating model of reality for educated people of that era.
The three major sections of the Voynich map suspiciously cleanly onto this framework:
- Herbal → Terrestrial (plants, material substances)
- Astronomical → Celestial (stars, cycles, time)
- Balneological → Human (body, fluids, vitality)
The manuscript wouldn't be three separate topics — it would be one unified system expressed through three lenses.
What the data suggests
Running statistical analysis on the IVTFF transliteration corpus produces some structural patterns that are hard to explain with cipher or natural language theory:
Labels behave like unique identifiers, not words
Across every section — pharmaceutical jars, astronomical stars, zodiac nymphs, herbal plants — label positions show vocabulary uniqueness ratios of 0.82–0.91. Paragraph text sits at 0.22–0.41. Labels aren't words being used repeatedly. They're names. Node identifiers in a system.
The qok- prefix behaves like a relational operator
Base words appear as labels. The same words with qok- prefix appear in paragraph text. And crucially — qok- is almost entirely absent from pure label fields across every section.
This is consistent with qok- functioning as a correspondence prefix — something like "of/in/belonging to" — turning an identifier into a coordinate. "keedy" names a node. "qokeedy" locates something in relation to it.
Locus type predicts text structure perfectly
Labels, paragraph text, circular text, radial text — each has its own statistical fingerprint. Word length, vocabulary density, daiin frequency, qok- density all vary systematically by structural position. That's not a cipher. Ciphers scramble content, they don't architect it.
daiin density tracks domain, not grammar
If daiin were a function word like "the" it would distribute evenly. Instead it's densest in Herbal A (10–14%) and nearly absent from zodiac labels (1–2%). It appears to mark a specific coordinate axis that some sections invoke heavily and others barely at all.
The picture that emerges
The manuscript might be structured as follows:
- Labels = unique node identifiers (names for things in the system)
- qok- + word = correspondence coordinate ("this node relates to this domain")
- daiin = primary axis marker (appears where the main correspondence axis is being invoked)
- Section vocabulary = different domains of the same underlying relational system
- Dense text pages = possibly the index or query interface, how you navigate the system
Under this reading, the "language" resists decipherment because it was never a language. It's a notation system — personal to its author, built for navigation not reading, and only meaningful to someone who already had the underlying correspondence model internalized.
The symbols aren't words waiting to be translated. They're addresses in a system whose map was always meant to be carried in the mind.
This is speculative — the framework fits but hasn't been formally tested against competing hypotheses. Posting here to see if the structural evidence holds up to scrutiny or if there are obvious gaps in the reading.
What does this community think. Has the memory palace / correspondence notation angle been seriously explored before?