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Re: (qo- words) vs (y- words)...?
Hi everyone,
Could it be that <EVA qo + gallows + ...> == <EVA y + gallows + ...>? Has
anyone compared the stats of these two types of VMS words?
I should perhaps put this within a larger context: the underlying
proposition is that the VMS aren't a single unified cipher or code, but are
in fact a multiplicity of them (perhaps an overlapping ecology, or even a
"society", recalling Minsky).
Then, each subgroup - for example, "ot-" words - would have its own
encoding style (and hence its own statistics). In which case, there would
be no central paradigm: any blip would be little more than subgroups'
statistical signatures poking weakly through the overall noise.
This would fit the observation that, by 1401, it was already known that
simple ciphers were vulnerable to attack: and this knowledge was to
disseminate throughout Europe during the following years. So: a lot of
effort was expended (by a lot of people) during the general time-frame of
the VMS to find ways to make ciphers harder to break. Including a number of
different (yet similar-looking) ciphers (as described) would be one way to
achieve this.
For example, I've said that "ot-" words remind me of indices, or
abbreviations, or referencing operations (though these may all ultimately
be the same thing) into a codebook. The AAH (and especially the
"conjunction" symbol-pairs) make this much more likely, ie because otolal =
ot- plus two symbols, (not ot- plus four symbols) under that reading.
And similarly, "qot-" words quite probably indicate a subgroup, as do "yt-"
words (etc).
But also, "d-" words (with the notable exception of "dain", which is
perhaps some kind of meta-code?) appear to have their own quite distinct
statistics - some days I think these look most like plaintext of anything
there. :-/
So: within this kind of structure, we'd need to:-
(1) determine the basic alphabet
(2) determine the subgroup structure - what subgroups exist? how do they
differ?
(3) attack all the subgroups in parallel - assign virtual assault leaders
to each one
Has anyone already tried to build up a taxonomy of likely subgroups present
in the VMS?
Cheers, .....Nick Pelling.....
PS: until you're sure of the underlying alphabet, who's to say that things
like OKOKOKO aren't anything more than merely transliteration artefacts?
PPS: in all the above, there is an implicit assumption that the underlying
alphabet is common to all the subgroups, though (cryptographically) that's
not 100% certain... each subgroup *could* have its own transliteration
style... but Occam's Razor (never a safety razor with the Voynich) would
~seem~ to make this extremely unlikely. :-/ Besides, this would be the
only way we'd ever get close to it if it did. :-)