This study proposes a constrained recursive production framework for the Voynich manuscript based on compact adjacency legality, local copy–mutation behavior, and limited active working state. Rather than attempting linguistic decipherment, the paper investigates how many observable structural properties of Voynichese may emerge operationally through recursive local generation. Using analyzer-driven sheet locality reduction, edit-distance inheritance tracing, positional gallows analysis, and a reproducible ledger-based generator, the study demonstrates that substantial portions of the manuscript’s orthographic ecology can be reproduced using a compact legality system combined with recursive local derivation. The framework reproduces persistent token-family formation, strong positional asymmetry, long-range orthographic continuity, and localized source-sheet collapse while operating without a global lexicon or large-scale planning state. The paper includes: recursive locality analysis across manuscript folios, compact ledger construction from observed adjacency legality, a reproducible generator implementation, analyzer recheck validation against generated corpora, statistical comparison tables, and operational discussion of historically plausible low-state production workflows. The study does not claim to decipher the manuscript or determine semantic content. Instead, it argues that many visible statistical and structural properties of Voynichese may arise naturally from constrained recursive local production dynamics operating within a compact orthographic system.
Rod Kinnison (Sat,) studied this question.