• amelung an hour ago

I think the image shown at the top right is the entire text that was discovered: because if you count all the lines (including even the ones where no mortal can see actual letters), you get 30. I admire the experts who can make sense out of it. Words are not separated by blanks. The first line in the second column may start with «ΚΑΙΤΟΙ ΠΩ…» ‹and yet wh…›. Below that perhaps «Η ΜΕΙΖΟΝ …» ‹or greater›. Further below even I can read clearly a «ΦΑΙΝΕΤΑΙ» ‹he / she / it appears›. Even further down I read «ΚΑΙ ΔΙΑ ΤΟΥΤΟΥ» ‹and through / per / via this›.

• Izikiel43 an hour ago

Fun fact about Empedocles, in Argentinian Spanish slang it means the one who is always drunk

• aap_ 5 hours ago

So is there any way to actually read it? Or do i have to buy an obscure french book? can you even buy the book? Academic publishing/gatekeeping is such a joke.

• marginalia_nu an hour ago

It's in the picture, I presume. Just gotta brush up on that Koine Greek. Or if you read Egyptian hieroglyphs already, you can use the Rosetta Stone to reconstruct the Koine Greek from first principles.

• addaon an hour ago

This feels like a knee-jerk reaction. While it may be a relevant critique of some news releases about academic research… this one literally contains a thumbnail with a link to a sufficiently-high-resolution image of the document. You can read it by clicking on the only image in the article.

• bombcar 4 hours ago

494 B.C.? Empedocles’ll DMCA you if you post them!

• canjobear 2 hours ago

It will probably be processed into an edited edition and then published as a book.

• pfdietz 4 hours ago

I'm hoping in these verses Empedocles complains about crappy copper from a Babylonian merchant.

• jblitzar 3 hours ago

I mean, it's still a pretty cool discovery.

• aap_ 3 hours ago

Probably! but how would i know?