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by 1propionyl
471 days ago
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Honestly paper, parchment and stone have a pretty bad record as a format. They either degrade or even if preserved can become unreadable (e.g. Linear B) without a surviving linguistic community. Even when the text survives and is rediscovered, translations produced with century-scale gaps often lose subtext or connotation that would still have registered across a narrower gap. I'd suggest an unbroken chain of oral transmission... |
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Much more slowly and gracefully than any digital medium we have concocted so far (save for core rope memory, maybe).
> even if preserved can become unreadable (e.g. Linear B) without a surviving linguistic community [...] translations produced with century-scale gaps often lose subtext
This pertains to the message and not the support; also, I'll take missing subtext over missing text any day of the week, thank you very much.