Monday, December 6, 2010

Engineering 101: The Basic Mechanism of Transmission

One of the startling things about the textual evidence is the vast difference in quality and quantity in the textual support for essentially two competing text-types, Alexandrian and Byzantine.

The Alexandrian is represented by a handful of 3rd and 4th century manuscripts, and partially supported by readings from early NT writers and versions.

The Byzantine is represented in full only by the vast majority of later copies, of various origins, ranging from the 4th century to the 14th century, and also with partial support from early writers and versions, but with little or partial support from the earliest surviving manuscripts.

How did this peculiar situation come to pass?


A Data Transmission Problem:

All textual critics seem to agree on the basic processes involved in the historical transmission of the text (hand-copying):
1) bifurcation (isolation and splitting into local texts)
2) divergence (independent insertions, substitutions and omissions)
3) mixture (corrections, cross-pollination between competing text-types)
4) evolution (updating of grammar, style,vocabulary)
5) data loss (individual copies inevitably containing errors)
These factors however, do nothing to explain the actual situation as found in the surviving manuscripts. None of the basic sub-processes above predict the formation of special, pure dead lines in special "pockets" of early manuscripts and the simultaneous failure of the majority of copies to preserve the readings.

As a result, textual critics diverge on just how much data loss occurred and where this data loss happened in various stages of transmission, and consequently how to evaluate the surviving evidences.

Some are optimistic that the essential message of the NT is preserved in its entirety among the multitude of witnesses to the text, in spite of individual errors and minor corruption throughout the manuscript corpus. In this view, the early manuscripts may reflect an unfortunate 'wildness' of text in some quarters, but that such inconsistent witnesses and the minority readings they contain have little real weight in the big scheme of textual transmission.

Others are skeptical and doubt that the true text can be found in the mass of witnesses. They feel rather that substantial corruption took place, and that the "true readings" will be found in a minority of surviving ancient manuscripts from dead transmission-lines, in particular the Alexandrian texts.

The case then boils down to this: Alexandrian or Byzantine. No serious textual critic suggests any other candidates for the original or early text. The whole debate is over the specific differences between the two basic text-types, and this is obvious from the two basic 'critical texts' offered by text-critical parties.

Although there are other early 'text-types' (like the 'Western') and other early witnesses (e.g. the Old Latin version), no large parties of textual critics are backing other horses.

4 comments:

  1. There is still a third possibility, which requires the investigator to seriously consider:

    Significant numbers of true readings could be distributed among various text-types or transmission lines, even 'versions' (early translations) like the Latin and Syriac.

    While pretending to find 90% of significant readings all in one 'basket' (the Alexandrian text) is patently absurd, there remains a strong possibility that at least some important and original readings will be found in other branches of transmission.

    We should expect to find good readings in all significant lines of transmission, and also expect to find some support for a good reading in more than one line most of the time.

    Situations where only one small line (like the Alexandrian or Western) holds the true reading should be rare, unless a credible mechanism can explain why it should not be the exception rather than the rule.

    peace
    Nazaroo

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  2. I think that misses my point: that there is a serious imbalance in the type, nature, and content of the different groups of evidence, and that this cannot be explained by the general principles and observations.

    There must be some specific cause or special circumstance at work, to create this vast gap between the two main textual groups of evidence.

    (Nazaroo: Did you notice I made you Van Cleef on the About page?)

    The Engineer

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wait till scrivener finds out you made him "The Ugly"...

    I thought you were arguing for 'normal' transmission on the S/N analogy... is this a trick?

    peace
    Nazaroo

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thank God I'm not the only cartoon character here.

    ...nice boy, but he's a little on the dumb side...

    ReplyDelete