Abstract: The Phaistos Protocol Title: The Phaistos Protocol: A Structural and Rhythmic Reconstruction of the Phaistos Disc Author: Samer Odeh Field: Linguistic Archaeology / Musicological Epigraphy Summary: This research presents a novel, functional decipherment of the Phaistos Disc (c. 1700 BC), identifying the artifact as a liturgical score for an ancient ritual chant. By applying a radical-acrophonic method—where symbols are read as the initial phonemes of reconstructed Minoan terms—the text has been fully vocalized for the first time. Key Findings: * Identification of the Deity: The 12-fold repetition of the sequence A-SA (Feathered Head + Shield) is identified as the name of the Minoan Mother Goddess, Asasara. Rhythmic Notation: Small strokes under the characters are interpreted as musical notation, marking metrical bars in a ritual dactyl (long-short-short). Centripetal Structure: The analysis reveals a reading from the center outwards, consisting of an Invocation on Side A and an Epiphany (Blessing) on Side B. Acoustic Realization: To validate the theory, the reconstructed phonemes and rhythms were synthesized using advanced AI audio technology, simulating archaic instrumentation such as the Minoan lyre and percussion. Conclusion: The consistency of the acrophonic key and the rhythmic patterns across both sides suggest that the Phaistos Disc represents the oldest recorded musical notation in human history. © 2026 Samer Odeh. This work is licensed under CC BY 4.0.
Samer Odeh (Tue,) studied this question.