CaliforniaKid wrote:Will,William Schryver wrote:The increase in the thickness of the papyri during the later Greco-Roman period, as indicated by the source you reference, was due to the introduction of the use of a pen as the writing instrument.
The JSP are written with a brush, and on a very thin papyrus stock, hence the fragility of the portion that was removed from the Horos scroll and mounted in glass.
In other words, the Joseph Smith Papyri do not meet the criteria of those papyri that were written on thicker stock during the later Greco-Roman period. Remember, the JSP date to around 250 B.C.
The source actually indicates that there was a general increase in papyrus thicknesses during this period, not that only papyri written on with Greek-style pens exhibited such an increase. Indeed, unless the manufacturers of papyri consulted their buyers ahead of time in order to determine what kind of writing implement was to be used, it wouldn't make much sense to expect the choice of implement to affect papyrus thickness. In any case, I actually agree that the Hor papyrus was unusually thin stock compared, for example, to the Dead Sea Scrolls. You will recall that my estimate of its thickness at about .25 mm is based on actual measurements, not on mere speculation about what thickness we would expect. this discussion about typical Ptolemaic thicknesses is only intended to show that Gee's numbers are far, far removed from what was typical for the period.
Best,
-Chris
Sorry, Chris.
You're wrong on this one.
Dead wrong.
And you have no evidence that proves otherwise, your assertions to the contrary notwithstanding.
Not that I believe you'll ever admit it, or that your receptive audience here will ever admit it. That, of course, is a given.
But where it really matters, you've actually already been proved wrong. And if you stick to this argument, you'll just continue to be on the wrong side of the data. So go ahead if you'd like. I actually want to strongly encourage you to publish on this subject, using the arguments you have used here. In fact, I beg you to not change your mind.