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Breakthrough Decodes 'Classical Holy Grail' 538

wka writes "Scientists at Oxford University have made a major breakthrough in their study of a large collection of Greek and Roman writings. Many of the documents known as the 'Oxyrhynchus Papyri' (found at 'ancient rubbish dump in central Egypt') are 'meaningless to the naked eye - decayed, worm-eaten and blackened by the passage of time.' Using an infrared technique originally developed for use with satellite imaging, scientists are able to view the original writing, which 'could lead to a 20 per cent increase in the number of great Greek and Roman works in existence'. Thus far, works by Sophocles, Lucian, Euripides, Hesiod and others have been (re-)discovered. Additionally, scientists think they 'are likely to find lost Christian gospels.' (via The Light of Reason)"
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Breakthrough Decodes 'Classical Holy Grail'

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 17, 2005 @06:22AM (#12260717)
    Dan Brown just had his next idea for a book...
  • by mrRay720 ( 874710 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @06:24AM (#12260729)
    'could lead to a 20 per cent increase in the number of great Greek and Roman works in existence'

    Well no, but it could certainly increase the number of them that we can read.

    Additionally, scientists think they 'are likely to find lost Christian gospels.'

    What's the betting that the one that reads "'The Bible' copyright 134AD, Any resemblance to people past or present is purely coincidental" is quickly covered up?
    • by Denyer ( 717613 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @06:40AM (#12260777)
      What's the betting that the one that reads "'The Bible' copyright 134AD

      Or the Red Dwarf version:

      Newsreader: Good evening. Here is the news on Friday, the 27th of Geldof. Archeologists near Mount Sinai have discovered what is believed to be a missing page from the Bible. The page is currently being carbon-dated in Bonne. If genuine, it belongs at the beginning of the Bible and is believed to read, "To my darling Candy. All characters portrayed within this book are fictitous and any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental." The page has been universally condemned by church leaders.

    • Well no, but it could certainly increase the number of them that we can read.

      If we cannot perceive well enough to read something, does the phrase "in existence" really apply to it?
    • >>What's the betting that the one that reads "'The Bible' copyright 134AD, Any resemblance to people past or present is purely coincidental" is quickly covered up?

      Those are called "gnostic gospels".
  • by ShaunC ( 203807 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @06:34AM (#12260759)
    ..can it decipher doctors' handwriting on prescription pads? That would be a momentous scientific advance!
    • ..can it decipher doctors' handwriting on prescription pads? That would be a momentous scientific advance!

      I certainly hope not!! That would take all of the fun out of it. I quite like getting random medication every month - makes life really worth living.
  • Using an infrared technique originally developed for use with satellite imaging, scientists are able to view the original writing, which 'could lead to a 20 per cent increase in the number of great Greek and Roman works in existence'.

    dei scientiam arrident :)
  • by Attaturk ( 695988 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @06:37AM (#12260771) Homepage
    Euripides papyri you pay for 'em.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 17, 2005 @06:41AM (#12260782)
    As a classicist, I want to express the incredible debt we owe to physical sciences. We dig stuff up all the time we can't read, and rely on chemists and physicists to find a way to get to the text. The Vindolandum tables, for instance - slats of wood on which Roman legionaires in Britan wrote letter on, and which were burned. Chemists managed to trace the residue of the ink on the wooden remains and we have volumes of personal correpondence.

    In this case, lost works by Sopholces are invaluable; we have only 7 of his plays complete. Any scrap we can add to the corpus provides a much better perspective of greek tragedy in general. And the possibility of finding lost gospels is always exciting for those of us interested in the development of Christianity.

    So to sum it up: Thanks for the help, guys! We'll be sure to include your names when people start asking who's responsible for the next crappy sword-and-sandal flick!
    • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:28AM (#12260915)
      "In this case, lost works by Sopholces are invaluable; we have only 7 of his plays complete."

      As Carl Sagan explained it:

      Imagine that we had some plays by this Shakespeare fellow, Titus Andronicus, Coriolanus, Cymbaline, Pericles, The Life of Timon of Athens, The Winter's Tale and Troilus and Cressida.

      Fine plays all. We know from the record that he wrote a few other plays that were well regarded in his time, but alas, those have been lost.

      KFG
    • Once they decode these papyrus rolls, it will be very interesting to see who will publish them. G** help us all in terms of copyrights, especially if we are able to "re-discover" a large number of the plays by ancient Greek playwrights!

      But the thing of major interest is the discovery that there may be more than just Theogeny and Works and Days by Hesiod. What does Hesiod's other writings say?
  • twenty + comments (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Daengbo ( 523424 )
    20+ comments and no discussion of the science -- mostly just bashes on Christians. I hate the elitists who seek to tear down instead of build!
    • by Denyer ( 717613 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:25AM (#12260904)
      I hate the elitists who seek to tear down instead of build!

      That's actually the criticism many people have of Christianity, you realise? As pertaining to trying to fit findings to a theory rather than theory to available evidence.

      Reading the article (which is a form of heresy in itself...) this is an exciting development, though it does make you wonder how many previous archaelogical finds got discarded over the years because no-one had an inkling as to their possible value.

      • by Daengbo ( 523424 )
        Hey, you know what? My comment wasn't defending Christianity (though I do think that, as long as people keep it out of my life, they can do what they want) -- just lamenting the lack of real discussion of this interesting issue. OTOH, there was a nice comment above me, made while I was commenting, which negates my post somewhat. I just don't like to see hate spewed out so much on a tech website about a science story.

        OTs to the lot of them, I say!
    • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @08:17AM (#12261047)
      mostly just bashes on Christians

      Well, you can imagine why people in the sciences might be a little snarky on this subject. A lot of the history of Christianity revolves around bashing people who try to point out the actual reality of the universe. Those people (scientists) do get a little tired of the unrelenting "seek to tear down" (to use your phrase) attitude from the religious side of the spectrum. So, must of the comments in that tone about this article are made in the context of a more-secular-than-usual audience, and presume a certain world-weariness on this subject.
      • by novakyu ( 636495 ) <novakyu@novakyu.net> on Sunday April 17, 2005 @11:23AM (#12261931) Homepage
        Well, you can imagine why people in the sciences might be a little snarky on this subject.

        The problem is, while religions do not make it a secret that they have a particular worldview and a set of beliefs (and thus, sometimes violent and not-so-righteous acts to enforce those beliefs), science is supposed to be objective, fact-based, and experimentally-verified. I'm not here to say that scientists should be completely free of bias or any personal prejudices, but they definitely shouldn't let those things guide nor hinder their work in science---not anything more than initial inspiration, anyway. Religion-bashing does not belong to the "people in sciences". Religion, as far as science is concerned, should be irrelevant---personally significant (either in a positive way or negative way) to a particular scientist, maybe; but it should in no way influence (either positively or negatively) his work in science.

        Is this a double-standard? Yes. But I put forward this double-standard as a double believer in scientific principles and Christ. And, as much as I don't like fundamentalists standing in the way of scientific progress, I am appalled by atheists exploiting success of science (which neither presumes nor denies existence of God, so far, at least) to bash religion. I would even go as far as to say that such coattailing is more cowardly act than oppressing minority beliefs under the authority of a powerful Church (a couple centuries back, anyway).

        • by luna69 ( 529007 ) * on Sunday April 17, 2005 @11:45AM (#12262083)
          The problem with your argument that science (and scientists) ought not be concerned with religion at allis that religion, and people who are religious, have very real, measurable impacts on the world and society.

          Many (if not most or all, depending on how you measure) of those impacts are negative - and it makes perfect sense for science (and scientists) to analyze, and comment on, religion.

          I am an atheist recisely because I am a scientist. If I were to, say, go into my lab and decide to believe that the electron had a positive charge, without any evidence whatsoever, and certainly no evidence that was verifiable & repeatable, I would be ignorant and stupid. Worse, if I got other people to believe this 'fact' that had no evidence to support it, I would be guilty of something worse: intentionally misleading people.

          I apply the same standards to everything, because a world (and human society) in which what is is more important than what we might wish is better than one in which we tell ourselves stories and them call them truth.
        • by localman ( 111171 )
          I am appalled by atheists exploiting success of science (which neither presumes nor denies existence of God, so far, at least) to bash religion.

          As an athiest, I don't think science puts the nail in religion's coffin. All the scientific explanations for the universe and it's functioning can be accepted as the design of God. And any contradictory passages in the bible can be labled as metaphor.

          If anything puts the nail in religion's coffin, it's history.

          Religions (at least the popular ones) have failed
        • by Thomas Miconi ( 85282 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @02:15PM (#12262998)
          I am appalled by atheists exploiting success of science (which neither presumes nor denies existence of God, so far, at least)

          Science does not and cannot disprove God (i.e. the idea of a supernatural Creator): such a concept is beyond science altogether. It is not possible to prove or disprove the fact that the world was initially created by a sentient being.

          However science, or even plain common sense, puts a lot of strain on religions, that is, particular teachings based on sacred revelations.

          Religion consists in switching off your brain and believing the unbelievable. Not only that, but believing in one particular set of unbelievable things, to the exclusion of any other. Hint: What is the difference between a religion and a cult, except for size and political impact ?

          I would even go as far as to say that such coattailing is more cowardly act than oppressing minority beliefs under the authority of a powerful Church

          Show me a preacher burnt at the stake (as in real fire and real charred flesh, not metaphorically) by a council of scientists and I'll agree with you.

          Thomas-
        • by killjoe ( 766577 )
          As long as scientists turn the other cheek while the christians are hitting them in the face with shovels the christians will continue to win.

          Right now the christians talibans control the US govt at the highest levels, the presidency, leadership of both houses of congress, the attorney generals office and even a good portion of the supreme court. There is a reason for that, they know how to figh and win.

          It's time the atheists and the people who believe in science get active. We all know what happens when
        • You misunderstand (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Lifewish ( 724999 )
          Scientists, on average, are perfectly rational when at work, and are objective and unbiased at all times during the day. Religion-bashing is a hobby for when they get home at night. Consider the evolutionary biologist or palaeontologist who is automatically stigmatised by large groups of orthodox christians. On a lesser note, consider the average scientist, who sees in the attitude of religious groups a continual repeat of Caliph Omar's infamous command to burn the books of the Library of Alexandria because
      • Well, you can imagine why people in the sciences might be a little snarky on this subject.

        Woah! Woah! Hold up!

        Since when are comment posters intrinsically "people in the sciences"? You might note that the actual scientists quoted in the article didn't find it necessary at all to take any potshots, and most of the comments I've read here from people who claim to be in the field recognize Christian artifacts as a great archeological find, not an opportunity to slip in a few snide comments.

        A lot of the

      • A lot of the history of Christianity revolves around bashing people who try to point out the actual reality of the universe. Those people (scientists) do get a little tired of the unrelenting "seek to tear down" (to use your phrase) attitude from the religious side of the spectrum.

        "A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Arizona, Consolmagno sees nothing incongruous about storing chunks of interplanetary debris next to the courtyard where Pope John Paul II presides
  • > ...Lost Gospels...

    Finally they can decode In The John 3:16: "An_ _e_us we_t dow_ on t_e me_ty co_k _hrou_h t_e gl_ry _ole."

    Hopefully it won't upset too much in religion.
    • "And Jesus wept down on the meaty cook [who] brough[t] the glor[ious (sic.)] mole."

      Sounds like Jesus had a terrific, Mexican-themed last supper. I'm sure people south of the border will be thrilled with this news.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 17, 2005 @06:54AM (#12260824)
    I'm writing a dissertation on the use of digital imaging technology applied to archaeological artefacts, so have been researching this sort of thing recently.

    The use of multispectral imaging (MSI) to view ancient papyri has been going on for some years now, with the following being some of the most interesting projects:

    - recovering text from a manuscript containing 10th century copies of some of Archimedes works which had been erased and over-written in the 12th century. http://www.thewalters.org/archimedes/frame.html [thewalters.org]

    - similar to the project above, this is the recovery of carbonised Roman papyri found in Herculaneum (which was covered in 100 feet of lava during the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD) http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-14522 44_1,00.html [timesonline.co.uk]

    There are also lots of other artefact imaging projects, such as that being carried out by the Digital Hammurabi Project (http://www.jhu.edu/digitalhammurabi/ [jhu.edu]), who want to digitise (make high-res 3D computer models of) ancient cuneiform tablets or the work at the University of Kentucky which may allow text to be 'read' without the artefact being touched at all - using a CT scan which can be decoded on a computer http://www.research.uky.edu/odyssey/fall04/seales. html [uky.edu]

    Awesome stuff...

  • How much are we betting that the scientists got their ideas by watching CSI?
  • by gt_swagger ( 799065 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:01AM (#12260838) Homepage
    But I've discovered it's really an ancient Linux (kernel 0.2.1), where all console output is put on paper. What did they find important enough to try and save? Apparently the following command, entered over and over:
    $ fortune
  • Copyright? (Score:5, Funny)

    by MarkByers ( 770551 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:01AM (#12260839) Homepage Journal
    I hope these works are not going to be reprinted without fully compensating the original authors, and their descendants.
    • Or more likely the new text will be copyright as an image of the original. Much like many pictures of old paintings are copyright. So it will be the institution that will benefit. Not the authors long dead or even the creative scientists that did the work.
  • i'm waiting (Score:4, Funny)

    by Rageon ( 522706 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:12AM (#12260863)
    Until it's capable of decoding Ogg Vorbis, I'm not buying it.
  • by cablepokerface ( 718716 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:18AM (#12260876)
    'Classical Holy Grail'

    ... for God's sake let them drink using the wooden cup and not the golden. I tell you, I've seen it happen before, I know.
  • by TheMediaWrangler ( 817300 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:28AM (#12260913)
    I am fascinated to hear that more gospels may be revealed. The Gospel of Thomas [earlychris...itings.com] was enlightening and actually led me to a better understanding of mainstream Christianity. Non-ecumenical gospels are fascinating because they haven't been highly tainted through interpretations and translations.
  • Tech where? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by mattr ( 78516 ) <mattr&telebody,com> on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:31AM (#12260924) Homepage Journal
    This is fascinating, but since this is a geek site I'd like more geek info. Like the tech behind it, info about the lab, if there are simple ways to use similar versions of this with neat hacks etc. Combined with this article [physorg.com] ("Light Scattering Method Reveals Details under Skin") and other research I've been following in imaging and structured light, it is clear that there are a ballooning number of applications based on clever ways of radiating and analyzing specific wavelengths, polarizations, etc. of light with computers. How about some more info?
  • by Fished ( 574624 ) * <amphigory@gma[ ]com ['il.' in gap]> on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:31AM (#12260927)
    As a student of the New Testament and early Christianity, I have to say that discoveries of "new" gospels are rarely very interesting. There was an explosion of gospel narratives starting in the late 2nd century (say 175). Most of these narratives are quite fantastic and have virtually no historical vallue. (Think of a 50 foot tall cross walking out of Jesus tomb, shouting imprecations upon Jerusalem.) More imporantly than their content, they are so late that any trace of historical content is purely derivative of the four canonical gospels.

    N.B. I don't include Thomas in quite this category - it is a much more complicated case. But, despite the shrill nonsense that comes from the entertainment industry (anybody see the epigraph on "Stigmata") most scholars, myself included, would not regard Thomas in its present form as even being in the same class as the 4 canonical gospels.

    At any rate, I suspect that any "lost gospels" found here will be of limited interest, mostly to scholars and pedants. Move along, nothing to see here.

    • by eddy ( 18759 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:56AM (#12260998) Homepage Journal

      >Think of a 50 foot tall cross walking out of Jesus tomb, shouting imprecations upon Jerusalem.

      Yeah, because that's just sooo much more fantastic than floating axes and talking bushes.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 17, 2005 @08:10AM (#12261033)
      Early gospels have virtually no historical value? What the hell? That's like claiming that the Federalist Papers or the Declaration of Independence are of little historical value.

      I'm guessing you're referring to 'historical' in the sense of the gospels recording historical events. What about the rest of the world? People used the rhetoric and ideas of Christianity to address problems outside the usual scope of the religion, or tried to mold the religion to fit personal or political objectives. These lost gospels tell us how people use religion, whether or not the religion has any sort of cosmic truth to it.

      And, as scholars are the people who write the history books, they are the ones who determin what has historical value.

      Your post reminds me of the religion students who used to take Greek with me at university. "Why are we reading Attic Greek?" they would ask, "We only need Koine to read the Bible!" There's far more to the ancient world than the 50-something (depending on denomination) books of the Bible, and even the Bible doesn't represent a self-contained system of information.
    • by anat0010 ( 76128 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @08:21AM (#12261057) Journal
      You don't see historical value here ? How has the 2nd century view of Christ changed from the modern interpretation ?
      Your example suggests that only 150 years after his death Christ was viewed as a super-human avenging spirit. 2000 years later we view him as a meek and mild self-sacrificing man. Yet the text of the gospels remains them same.
      If you fail to see any interest here, I suspect you are more interested in reiterating the rhetoric of your teachers rather than studying early Christianity and interpreting the scriptures in the context of the epoch in which they were written and the church founded.
      • by Jerf ( 17166 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @01:09PM (#12262607) Journal
        Yes, anat0010, that one document changes everything. One document, written by one guy somewhere, with no sanction and the general historical consensus it wasn't worth keeping, and suddenly we have a better understanding of "the 2nd century views of Christ".

        By the way, have you read that Unabomber manifesto? Turns out the average American is anti-technology and bombs people through the mail system, which is apparently the primary use of the mail system in 20th century America. And the recent find of "Dianetics" provides a fascinating view into the religious beliefs of the average American of the 20th century.

        No, wait a minute, that's not right.

        (One of the persistent fallacies is that the humans of the past are somehow different than today, particularly in their uniformity. They aren't, and the historically-rejected writings of one guy are about as representative as the same happening today, which is to say, not necessarily useless, but you might only learn about the dominant paranoid schizophrenic fantasies of the day (like black helicopters and mind-control beams today), not the common man. You are getting one very small fragment of an image of the time, don't make the mistake of focusing on one small piece and projecting it out on the entire time period. You are the blind man examining the elephant, not a well-informed almost-omniscient observer.)

        There is more than enough data to study the 2nd century church, one need not over-intepret one piece of evidence to push an agenda.
  • does not benifit mankind.
  • by Dot.Com.CEO ( 624226 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @07:33AM (#12260934)
    and I find it amazing that there are people speaking of the possibility of discovering lost gospels as if something like that would be extraordinary. There is a series of lost gospels, otherwise called the "Nag Hamadi library" (google for it) that gave rise to a modern revival of the gnostic church, a set of believes that have deeply influenced popular culture (the Matrix is full of gnostic elements, for example.

    Elaine Pagels work in the subject is fascinating - gnosticism itself is fascinating in its contradictions and, if anything, shows how different christianity might have been.

    • by MemoryDragon ( 544441 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @06:11PM (#12264459)
      The problem with gnosticism is, that it was there way before christianity and influenced lots of other religions as well.

      One of the reasons the early church dismissed many of those "gospels" was that they had a dubious heritage and they basically just should pave an inroad for gnosticism.

      In reading for instance Thomas, you can clearly see the gnostic roots and also some greek influences which are totally in opposite of what you can gather about the personality of jesus in the other gospels.

  • A re-renaissance? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by sellin'papes ( 875203 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @08:01AM (#12261012) Homepage
    Ancient roman and greek text were lost to the persian/ottoman empires. Western civilization (coincidentaly?) fell into the dark ages for centuries before the texts were rediscovered. This discovery let to renaissance of scientific and political thought.

    I wonder what discoveries will be made that could cause a re-renaissance in our modern civilization.

    • It's doubtful. The technology of the Roman empire was superior to that of the Dark Ages. I think it's safe to say that our current advancement has surpassed anything known to the Romans. We even have concrete and a loathing of all things Christian.
  • by seven of five ( 578993 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @09:22AM (#12261226)
    The bible has already gone thru zillions of revisions, leaving out many parts along the way. Remember, there was a huge pile of hallucinatory writing done by starving desert dwelling hermits. They had to toss out the completely incoherent gibberish so they could publish the quasi-coherent hallucinations.

    William Burroughs and Ted Kaczynsky had predecessors.
    • Dip-shit Peckerweek mods! Let's hear it for the nerdly knee-jerk goddist who can't suffer a less than perfectly aesthetic view of their religion.

      The parent-post is perfectly legitimate in that it describes just one of several methods employed by aspiring holy-men. Deprivation and seclution are still practiced, formally and informally even today by various flavors of every popular religion. Several of the gospels were the result of some really crazy bugger stumbling back into town/village/citystate and clai
  • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @09:36AM (#12261269)
    Turns out that this was merely a grail-shaped beacon at the Egyptian rubbish dump.
  • Lost works (Score:3, Insightful)

    by MsWillow ( 17812 ) * on Sunday April 17, 2005 @10:57AM (#12261769) Homepage Journal
    With all this talk about finding lost Gospels, nobody has even thought to mention the greatest Greek poet, whose works, all but a few fragments, were destroyed over the years by religious zealots. I'm talking about Sappho, of course.

    I'd be very keen on reading any of her poems. What little we still have is all fragmentary, and highly unlikely to be representative of her best

    So come on, folks, please look for her poetry too, while you're reading about 50-foot tall crosses.
  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Sunday April 17, 2005 @11:16AM (#12261880) Homepage Journal

    Always look on the bright side of life,
    doo-doo, doo-doo-dee-doo-dee-doo!

    -- Gospel of Terry

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