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A Watermark, and 'Spidey Sense,' Unmask a Forged Galileo Treasure (nytimes.com) 40

One of the University of Michigan Library's most prized possessions, which appeared to be a Galileo manuscript, is now thought to be the work of a 20th-century forger. From a report: Galileo Galilei was peering through a new telescope in 1610 when he noticed something strange: several bright objects flickering around the planet Jupiter that seemed to change positions nightly. His discovery, of moons orbiting Jupiter, was a major crack in the notion, widely held since antiquity, that everything in the universe revolved around the Earth. The finding, which was condemned by the Catholic Church, helped prove the theory of a sun-centered solar system. For decades the University of Michigan Library has prized a manuscript related to the discovery, describing it as "one of the great treasures" in its collection. At the top is the draft of a letter signed by Galileo describing the new telescope, and on the bottom are sketches plotting the positions of the moons around Jupiter -- "the first observational data that showed objects orbiting a body other than the earth," the library described it.

At least it would be if it were authentic. After Nick Wilding, a historian at Georgia State University, uncovered evidence suggesting the manuscript was a fake, the library investigated and determined that he was right: The university said Wednesday it had concluded that its treasured manuscript "is in fact a 20th-century forgery." "It was pretty gut-wrenching when we first learned our Galileo was not actually a Galileo," Donna L. Hayward, the interim dean of the university's libraries, said in an interview. But since the purpose of any library is to expand knowledge, she said, the university had decided to be forthright about its findings and publicly announce the forgery. "To sweep it under the rug is counter to what we stand for."

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A Watermark, and 'Spidey Sense,' Unmask a Forged Galileo Treasure

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  • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @10:48AM (#62803627)

    But since the purpose of any library is to expand knowledge, she said, the university had decided to be forthright about its findings and publicly announce the forgery. "To sweep it under the rug is counter to what we stand for."

    was this even ever considered?

    • I'm sure it was. Money makes people do all sorts of dodgy things, and the library has just taken a large write-down in the value of its collection.
    • by Too Late for Cool ID ( 1794870 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @11:10AM (#62803723)

      But since the purpose of any library is to expand knowledge, she said, the university had decided to be forthright about its findings and publicly announce the forgery. "To sweep it under the rug is counter to what we stand for."

      was this even ever considered?

      You could just quietly remove it from the collection and still be kinda ethical. Announcing it is much better, if embarrassing. Scholars who used the manuscript can revise their work as necessary.

      • by neilo_1701D ( 2765337 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @11:23AM (#62803771)

        Scholars who used the manuscript can revise their work as necessary.

        Except this almost never happens.

        Look at the recent dementia research that was just undone because of the discovery of faked data. There is 20 years of subsequent research that was built on top of that study, and it should all be invalidated and retracted. But it won't, because too much is at stake in terms of research grants, tenure, the "publish or perish" mentality, etc.

        • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
          There's an idea for a website: track flawed papers, and give research studies a score based on how many flawed papers they quote. You could even call your algorithm "PaperRank".
    • I know someone will correct me if I'm wrong but be gentle I'm typing this from memory...

      60 Minutes had a piece decades ago about The Rembrandt Project. Where experts were painstakingly trying to narrow down whether the glut of paintings by Rembrandt were actually done by him or his students. To date they had already discredited a lot of paintings as being those of his pupils. One expert interviewed said they couldn't get access to several paintings because the owners were afraid they'd end up being "fakes".

      • And that's the thing with this case, they're making a point of publicising the fact that it's a fake and they acknowledge it, even if doing so is painful. The big story isn't that it's a fake, it's that they're making the fact public, which many other institutions wouldn't do.
  • TFA? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pz ( 113803 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @10:55AM (#62803645) Journal

    Link to the original article, please.

    It would be very interesting to know how they figured out it was a forgery. That's the technical aspect to the news. That should be the reason it's on Slashdot at all.

  • If someone at the University of Michigan Library even hinted that this could be a possible course of action, that person should be terminated. Why would anyone even bring this idea?

    • by decep ( 137319 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @12:19PM (#62803977)

      I do not think it was implied that "sweeping it under the rug" meant ignoring evidence. The university could just as easily quietly remove the document from their inventory and never mention it again.

      Never let a good crisis go to waste... the university is just making lemonade from a bad situation.

    • My take: the representative was saying what course of action they must take: total transparency. "Sweeping it under the rug" was just stated as the counterfactual, not actually considered,

  • by Osgeld ( 1900440 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @11:01AM (#62803683)

    The first clue that brought up suspicions was the fact it was written on A4 copy paper

  • From the summary

    "It was pretty gut-wrenching when we first learned our Galileo was not actually a Galileo," Donna L. Hayward, the interim dean of the university's libraries, said in an interview. But since the purpose of any library is to expand knowledge, she said, the university had decided to be forthright about its findings and publicly announce the forgery. "To sweep it under the rug is counter to what we stand for."

    What a wonderfully refreshing attitude.

  • <blockquote>The finding, which was condemned by the Catholic Church, helped prove the theory of a sun-centered solar system.</blockquote>

    I know this is the popular narrative but it's wildly misleading. The vast majority of academics of the time, who had all built careers on the Ptolemaic system, also condemned the discovery; the church merely went along with them. His trial was instigated by academics who disagreed with him. The popular idea is that priests refused to put their eye to Galileo
    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      But if he hadn't written that "triologue" barely hiding the defamatory representation of the Pope, it probably wouldn't have happened.

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @11:19AM (#62803755) Homepage

      <blockquote>The finding, which was condemned by the Catholic Church, helped prove the theory of a sun-centered solar system.</blockquote> I know this is the popular narrative but it's wildly misleading. The vast majority of academics of the time, who had all built careers on the Ptolemaic system, also condemned the discovery;

      Not really.

      The academics of the time outside of church-controlled Italy all agreed with Galileo.

      (And, for that matter the "vast majority of academics of the time" did not have the power of the inquisition to try and condemn people for heresy.)

      • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

        by ravenshrike ( 808508 )

        If he didn't want to be condemned for heresy and put under house arrest, not insulting the pope in writing and distributing it to all and sundry would have been a really good idea. But he was an asshole and so he did. What's more, because he was such an asshole about other people's work, e.g. comets,, none of his fellow scientists were willing to back him up or give character references at his trial. Motherfucker went to the church and demanded his teachings be immediately taught as dogmatic church truth, t

        • Awww, poor butthurt babies modding me troll because they fail to understand that the current treatment of speech was very much not the case in Galileo's time and everyone then new damn well that insulting the wrong person could get you in a shitload of trouble.

        • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

          If he didn't want to be condemned for heresy and put under house arrest, not insulting the pope in writing and distributing it to all and sundry would have been a really good idea.

          Most likely true, I expect.

          But that does not contradict the fact that the statement quoted was in fact completely correct:

          "The finding, which was condemned by the Catholic Church, helped prove the theory of a sun-centered solar system."

      • by Opyros ( 1153335 )
        Wrong. See this answer from the Ask Historians Reddit. There were only about a dozen astronomers in all who accepted heliocentrism at the time. And the Church never "condemned" his observation of the moons of Jupiter, only his insistence on stating heliocentrism as fact at a time when it wasn't yet established.
        • by XXongo ( 3986865 )
          I don't have the foggiest idea where you get your ideas. However, the statement in the article is correct. The Catholic church condemned helicentricity, anybody who believed it the helicentric theory was a heretic, and Galileo was condemned and convicted by the Catholic Church for believing in heliocentrism, and forced to recant his views. End of story.

          In 1992, three hundred and fifty years later, the Catholic Church admitted they were wrong and apologized.

          If you want to learn something, try the wikipedia

          • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

            I don't have the foggiest idea where you get your ideas.

            Oh, wait, you said where you get your ideas: you get them from reddit.

            Right.

    • Yes (Score:3, Insightful)

      Fuck religion. It was designed as a means of control and had done nothing but hold back science and humanity. Not to mention our catholic majority supreme court and their decisions based on voter base and religion.

  • the Italian [forger] had reportedly started selling fake letters and musical manuscripts to support seven mistresses.

    He needed to forge better porn. The bastard was extra horny.

  • by dpille ( 547949 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @01:02PM (#62804139)
    I think the reference to the Jovian moons sketch and some noted difficulty understanding it is really interesting- I wish they had reported on which scholars were troubled by it and why. Reading the summary, one of the first things I thought was, oh, of course, the moons were in the wrong place for the time it was allegedly written. Given the later detailed study Galileo did to suggest using the moons to find longitude on Earth, it seems it would have been trivial to catch such an error in the 17th century, let alone the 20th.
  • by dogsbreath ( 730413 ) on Friday August 19, 2022 @01:28PM (#62804245)
    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )
      I'd like to know where he found time to forge this document while having seven mistresses to support.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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