7/26/2023 0 Comments Voynich manuscript solved 2018The Voynich manuscript is not written with letters. With her help was able to translate a few dozen words that are completely relevant to the theme sections. Part of the key hints is placed on the sheet 14. The key to the cipher manuscript placed in the manuscript. There is a key to cipher the Voynich manuscript. I recall you’ve done some mention of this somewhere.Īll this would be putting people in the right direction instead of trying to identify some obscure detail of a drawing which might, just might be similar to some similar thing in some obscure book from the 1500 or 1400’s or, ditto, some handwriting oddity? ![]() Most importantly, particularly on the excellent work you have done, which folios were originally next to one another based on your handwriting style and other suppositions. A good summary of these oddities would be great but right now they are scattered around in various articles, books and web sites. Which sections are written in Voynich A and which in B. How about a review of Voynich declensions (or whatever you’d want to call them)? What words often appear at the end of “sentences” ? Which words are often followed by other words. These can be analyzed objectively without falling into the linguistic quagmire which you correctly criticize. There’s your theory, there’s the intriguing Aztec related hypothesis by an outstanding botanist supported by observations and some actual, at the very least tenable decodings at least for some illustrations and there are others. How about some articles on good approaches. Nick, you’re too fixated on wrong approaches, bad theories, speculative dead ends and just plain fantasy that will never solve it. That’s probably just coincidental (or possibly some time travelling geocache trickery), but I thought I’d mention it anyway. ![]() On the down side, however, I should point out that the talk is marked as “Campus Only” on the website, so even if you do want to go along, you may not actually get in: hence I’d certainly advise phoning or emailing beforehand if you are considering this.Īs a sidenote, fans of Alex Scarrow’s books will probably remember that “Timeriders: The Doomsday Code” features a computer hacker called Alex Lewis, who finds his name hidden in the Voynich Manuscript. ![]() Incidentally, I don’t believe I’ve ever talked with Adam, but I suspect this is his LinkedIn profile here. So… why is it that the floor around the VMs is littered with so many dead bodies, so many foolish theories, indeed so many grotesquely idiotic theories? What is it about the Voynich Manuscript that draws out the airiest and least tethered of speculations from people? It’s certainly a topic I’ve thought a lot about over the years, and so I look forward to (eventually) reading Adam Lewis’s senior thesis: it should be fun. Incidentally, here’s a picture of the University of Puget Sound’s mascot “Grizz the Logger” in action: the Sagittarius crossbowman, etc), I do try to use my posts to communicate a sense of enthusiasm and excitement.Īnd so here’s something that might well prove to be interesting: an “Honors senior thesis presentation” courtesy of Adam Lewis at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma in Washington, entitled “ An Anatomy of Failure: Analysis Attempts to Decode the Voynich Manuscript” – 6pm-7pm on 21st February 2018, at UPS’s Wyatt Hall, Room 109. On those rare occasions such a thing does happen (e.g. Given that most Voynich furrows have been heavily overploughed over the last two decades, it has become rare for something novel to pop up on my Voynich radar.
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