Uni-Tübingen

Philosophy rises from the ashes

The eruption of Mount Vesuvius 2,000 years ago buried the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum under a hot cloud of ash. Now AI is helping sift through charred scrolls – a technological leap that could usher in a second Renaissance.

The Vesuvius Challenge is an unparalleled competition in the field of classical studies, with the potential to pave the way for something akin to a second Renaissance. Its objective is to use artificial intelligence (AI) to virtually unroll hundreds of closed papyrus scrolls, containing ancient literature that has not been seen for 2,000 years.

When Mount Vesuvius erupted in AD79, it buried various cities in the Gulf of Naples under massive volcanic material – including Herculaneum, located near Pompeii. In the 18th century, an exceptionally luxurious Roman villa was excavated there, close to the ancient city walls and shoreline. The villa’s marvellous wall paintings, mosaics, busts and statues had been conserved by the ashes. This building, Villa of the Papyri, is named after its most remarkable treasure. It housed the only preserved library from antiquity: around 1,000 papyrus scrolls that were not destroyed by the eruption, but carbonized (turned into a kind of charcoal) and sealed in the earth until their rediscovery.
The villa probably belonged to Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus, a Roman consul and Julius Caesar’s father-in-law. He was the patron of the Epicurean philosopher Philodemus of Gadara (110 – 30BC), who may have lived in the villa. Before moving to Italy, Philodemus was educated in Athens at the philosophical centre of the Epicureans. Its founder, Epicurus, proclaimed the world was made up of atoms and considered pleasure, friendship and atheism as essentials for a happy life. The original Greek texts of the Epicureans were lost in late antiquity, but a Latin poetic version of Epicurus’s philosophical views survived. It dealt with ethics and especially physics, and was titled On The Nature Of Things.

Since their discovery, several attempts have been made to mechanically unroll the fragile papyri, with only modest success. Many scrolls were almost completely destroyed, while others were badly damaged and are now very fragmentary. Parts of over 300 scrolls stored in Naples are still waiting to be unrolled.

What does all this have to do with AI?


The key to discerning the carbon ink from the carbonized papyrus background is AI.


The plan for non-invasive reading of the Herculaneum papyri was first pursued by University of Kentucky computer scientist Brent Seales in 2007. He worked on the problem for about 15 years. But while he succeeded with other scrolls, the Herculaneum papyri proved very tricky. Seales recognized that the key to discerning the carbon ink from the carbonized papyrus background was AI. Initial experiments confirmed his hypothesis that AI could help recover the elusive ink from the CT scans, but significant challenges remained to unlock the secrets of the scrolls. Silicon Valley entrepreneur Nat Friedman came across Seales’ work and suggested they establish an open-source AI challenge to accelerate the progress. Several prizes, including one of USD $1 million (£ 771,835), were promised to people or teams who could finally crack the scrolls.

Since March 2023, more than 1,000 teams have entered this competition. In October 2023, the first letters and lines of Greek text were detected, and in February 2024, the first winners of the prize money – machine learning students Youssef Nader, Luke Farritor and Julian Schilliger – were announced. Their AI model spectacularly revealed parts of 15 columns from the innermost part of one of the scrolls. It was a text on ethics, probably written by Philodemus. 

This “virtual unrolling” technique starts by scanning the carbonized scroll in a particle accelerator at super-high resolution. Then, the complex structure of the scroll is analyzed and virtually flattened – but no text can yet be seen. At this point, the team trains ink detection AI models on the papyrus, based on distinct patterns that have been isolated through visual inspection. 

The winning images can be considered definitive proof of concept – virtually unrolling the Herculaneum scrolls is possible. Although several technical difficulties remain, many of the other unopened scrolls should be virtually unrolled in the near future.

This breakthrough facilitated the funding of phase two of the Vesuvius Challenge, with donors including Elon Musk’s charity, the Musk Foundation. The next objective is to scan more scrolls and to accelerate and standardize thevirtual unrolling process.It is highly possible that dozens of new ancient Greek and Latin texts will emerge over the next few years. We can extrapolate the types of text to expect based on those already unrolled mechanically. As the Greek library was a special Epicurean library, most of the emerging works should cover topics like ethics, mathematics, music, and the history of philosophy. Some Stoic literature might appear – and Epicurean texts also often contain lengthy citations from otherphilosophers or authors, as well as previously unknownhistorical information. But the biggest surprises may come from the Latin papyri. We can reasonably hope for historical and poetical Latin works from Rome’s late Republican and early Imperial periods.

There is also the possibility that the virtual unrolling may prompt new excavations at the Villa of the Papyri (phase four of the Vesuvius Challenge). Many researchers believe that another Greek and Latin library – with its all lost masterpieces –has yet to be unearthed.

PD Dr Kilian Fleischer is a member of the scientific advisory board of the Vesuvian Challenge. Once the AI teams have deciphered further letters, lines and columns, the twelve international experts check the results for plausibility: are they really Greek and Latin letters and has the AI deciphered the sequence of characters as they were actually written? Kilian Fleischer heads the DFG research project “The History of the Stoa” at the University of Tübingen. He has been studying the scrolls from Herculaneum for over 15 years, working together with AI researchers. This enabled him to identify the exact burial site of Plato in Athens: In the garden of his academy near the Shrine of the Muses.

Text: PD Dr. Kilian Fleischer


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