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Textual criticism - Stemmatic and Phylogenetic Techniques

Understand stemmatic and phylogenetic techniques for building textual families, how they select and emend readings, and the major limitations of each method.
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What is the primary goal of the stemmatic approach (stemmatology) in textual criticism?
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Summary

Stemmatic and Phylogenetic Approaches to Textual Criticism Introduction: Building Family Trees of Texts When scholars have multiple copies of an ancient text—many with different readings and errors—how do they figure out which version is closest to the original? One powerful approach is stemmatics (also called stemmatology), which treats manuscripts like family members and maps their relationships using a diagram called a stemma. The core insight behind stemmatics is elegant: when two manuscripts share the same unusual error, they likely descended from a common ancestor. This principle—"community of error implies community of origin"—allows scholars to group manuscripts into families based on the errors they share. By mapping these relationships, they create a family tree that shows which copies depend on which other copies, working backward toward the original text. How Stemmatics Works: Four Key Steps Stemmatic analysis follows a systematic four-step process: Step 1: Recension (Building the Family Tree) The first step is recension, where scholars construct the stemma itself. To do this, they: Identify shared errors among manuscripts. An error is significant only if it's unusual—not something a scribe might naturally make twice independently. For example, if three manuscripts all skip the same phrase in exactly the same way, that's strong evidence they copied from a common source. Group manuscripts into hyparchetypes. A hyparchetype is a hypothetical common ancestor that multiple manuscripts descended from. It's not the original text, but rather an intermediate ancestor that several surviving copies can be traced back to. Create a stemma codicum, the complete family tree diagram showing all relationships. This visual representation shows which hyparchetypes led to which other manuscripts, creating a branching pattern. The key assumption here is that each manuscript copies from only one source. This is crucial to understand because it can break down in practice (we'll discuss this later). Step 2: Selectio (Choosing the Original Reading) Once the family tree is built, scholars move to selectio—selecting what the original text said. Rather than trusting any single manuscript, they compare readings from the closest hyparchetypes (the manuscript families highest up in the tree). Here's where judgment comes in: when two competing readings appear equally often across the families, the critic must decide which is more likely original. This requires evaluating not just frequency, but the plausibility of how each reading might have been altered. Did one reading get changed by mistake? Did scribal habit explain a variant? These judgments have sparked significant scholarly debate. Step 3: Examinatio (Finding Problems) Examinatio identifies passages that look corrupt—places where the text doesn't make sense, contains obvious scribal errors, or shows signs of damage. A passage might look nonsensical, have grammatical problems that no scribe would have written intentionally, or contain physical damage in surviving manuscripts. Step 4: Emendatio (Fixing Errors) Finally, emendatio attempts to fix problems identified in examinatio. Sometimes scholars find a plausible reading in one of the manuscript families. But sometimes no surviving manuscript has a satisfactory reading. In these cases, scholars may propose a conjectural emendation—an educated guess about what the original must have said, based on logic and knowledge of how scribal errors occur. These conjectures have no manuscript support; they're purely reasoned reconstructions. The Phylogenetic Method: A New Computational Approach How Phylogenetics Works In recent decades, scholars have borrowed a method from biology called phylogenetics. Just as biologists use genetic differences to trace how species are related, textual scholars use textual differences to group manuscripts. The process works like this: Record all differences between every pair of witnesses (manuscripts) Run a computer algorithm that groups witnesses by shared characteristics Generate an automated stemma showing the relationships This approach removes some human subjectivity from the initial grouping process—the computer simply identifies what it shares with what, without the scholar making judgment calls about which errors are "significant." Key Limitations However, phylogenetics faces important constraints: It doesn't identify the base of the tree. Phylogenetic analysis shows relationships but doesn't tell you which branch represents the original text. You still need external evidence (like dating, textual logic, or historical context) to determine which reading is original. Contamination causes problems. In reality, scribes sometimes mixed readings from multiple sources. When one manuscript draws text from two different ancestors rather than just one, this "horizontal transfer" breaks the tree structure. The computer assumes a clean family tree, so contamination can mislead the analysis. Limitations and Challenges The Contamination Problem Both stemmatics and phylogenetics assume each witness derives from a single predecessor in a clean family tree. But contamination—when a scribe consults multiple source manuscripts—violates this assumption. If a manuscript copies from two different ancestors, it muddles the family relationships and can produce a misleading stemma. The Error-Detection Problem A fundamental challenge lurks beneath both methods: scholars must correctly distinguish errors from correct readings. This is harder than it sounds. Some variant readings might be: Genuine alternatives that existed in antiquity Scribal mistakes Intentional theological changes Corrections to fix earlier errors Influential scholars like W. W. Greg have questioned whether we can reliably tell the difference. If critics misidentify which readings are "errors," their entire stemma collapses, since the method depends on correctly identifying shared mistakes. Subjectivity and Bias Despite their systematic appearance, textual criticism methods involve interpretation. Canons and rules of criticism can be applied selectively to support a scholar's preexisting theological views, aesthetic preferences, or theories about the text. What one critic sees as an obvious error, another might consider genuine. The Problem of Incomplete Evidence In practice, scholars rarely have ideal evidence. The surviving manuscript base may be: Skewed temporally: we have many late copies but few early ones Geographically limited: we have copies from only certain regions Fragmentary: some witnesses are partial or damaged Scholars must then balance the weight of many later copies (which might descend from a single error) against a handful of older ones. This can lead to different reasonable conclusions about what the original text said. <extrainfo> Additional Context: Textual critics sometimes face situations where the rules seem to conflict. For instance, the principle "choose the older manuscript" contradicts "choose the reading that best explains how other readings arose." When such tensions appear, critics must exercise judgment—a moment where scholarly integrity becomes crucial, as different choices can produce very different texts. </extrainfo>
Flashcards
What is the primary goal of the stemmatic approach (stemmatology) in textual criticism?
To build a family tree (stemma) representing relationships among textual witnesses.
Which fundamental principle states that shared errors indicate a common ancestor in stemmatics?
“Community of error implies community of origin.”
What are the sub-families of manuscripts that share the same errors called?
Hyparchetypes.
What is the name for the overall diagram illustrating the relationships between manuscripts?
Stemma codicum.
How does a critic perform "selectio" after building a stemma?
By comparing variants from the closest hyparchetypes to choose the reading of the archetype.
What is the purpose of "examinatio" in the stemmatic method?
To identify passages that appear corrupt or nonsensical.
What does the process of "emendatio" involve?
Replacing corrupted passages, sometimes using conjectural emendations with no surviving source.
What specific assumption of the stemmatic method is violated by "contamination" from multiple sources?
The assumption that each witness derives from a single predecessor.
How are textual witnesses treated within the framework of a phylogenetic branching tree?
As taxa.
How do computers assist in the phylogenetic analysis of texts?
They record all differences among witnesses and group them by shared characteristics to produce an automated stemma.
What is a major limitation of phylogenetic analysis regarding the identification of the original text?
It cannot identify which branch is closest to the original; external evidence is required.
In phylogenetics, what term describes the horizontal transfer of readings that can mislead tree construction?
Contamination.
How can subjective editorial bias influence the application of textual criticism rules?
Rules can be interpreted to support a critic’s specific theological or aesthetic agenda.
What difficulty does the scarcity of early witnesses create for textual critics?
They must balance the weight of many later copies against a small number of older ones.

Quiz

When phylogenetic methods are applied to textual criticism, textual witnesses are treated as what?
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Key Concepts
Textual Criticism Methods
Textual criticism
Stemmatics
Phylogenetic method (textual criticism)
Computational textual criticism
Emendatio
Contamination (textual criticism)
Stemmatic Analysis
Stemma codicum
Hyparchetype
Archetype (Selectio)
Key Figures
W. W. Greg