why are those differences in pagination so prominent? what does it imply about the manuscript? does it imply he's moving this passage around, and, therefore, it gets different pagination when he wants it in different places? i don't think so. we didn't think so. eventually, well, we could say at least it wasn't this, this is the normal way a manuscript gets transmitted. no, that's not what's happened here. this is something like what happened. it was eventually figured out by identifying the physical characteristics of different type scripts, that there was one central type script, ts i, that was made from the original stenographer's notes. and at some point they had it retyped in what we call ts ii and yet again in what we call ts iv. the question is -- that's big progress because it tells you what has the most authority, and it tells you what to make of, let's say, variants in the type script here. but the problem is this thing. this one is page 1, this is page 150, this is page 408. why? i think it's clear that this, these high numbers imply that there's something missing up