Lectio difficilior potior (Latin for "the more difficult reading is the stronger") is a main principle of textual criticism. Where different manuscripts conflict on a particular reading, the principle suggests that the more unusual one is more likely the original. The presupposition is that scribes would more often replace odd words and hard sayings with more familiar and less controversial ones, than vice versa.[1] Lectio difficilior potior is an internal criterion, which is independent of criteria for evaluating the manuscript in which it is found,[2] and that it is as applicable to manuscripts of a roman courtois, a classical poet, or a Sanskrit epic as it is to a biblical text.

The principle was one among a number that became established in early 18th-century text criticism, as part of attempts by scholars of the Enlightenment to provide a neutral basis for discovering an urtext that was independent of the weight of traditional authority.

History

Erasmus expressed the idea in his Annotations to the New Testament in the early 1500s: "And whenever the Fathers report that there is a variant reading, that one always appears to me to be more esteemed (by them is the one) which at first glance seems the more absurd-since it is reasonable that a reader who is either not very learned or not very attentive was offended by the specter of absurdity and changed the text."[3]

According to Paolo Trovato, who cites as source Sebastiano Timpanaro, the principle was first codified by Jean Leclerc in 1696 in his Ars critica.[4] It was also laid down by Johann Albrecht Bengel, as "proclivi scriptioni praestat ardua", in his Prodromus Novi Testamenti Graeci Rectè Cautèque Adornandi, 1725, and employed in his Novum Testamentum Graecum, 1734.[5] It was widely promulgated by Johann Jakob Wettstein, to whom it is often attributed.[6]

Usefulness

Many scholars considered the employment of lectio difficilior potior an objective criterion that would even override other evaluative considerations.[7] The poet and scholar A. E. Housman challenged such reactive applications in 1922, in the provocatively titled article "The Application of Thought to Textual Criticism".[8]

On the other hand, taken as an axiom, the principle lectio difficilior produces an eclectic text, rather than one based on a history of manuscript transmission. "Modern eclectic praxis operates on a variant unit basis without any apparent consideration of the consequences", Maurice A. Robinson warned. He suggested that to the principle "should be added a corollary, difficult readings created by individual scribes do not tend to perpetuate in any significant degree within transmissional history".[9]

A noted proponent of the superiority of the Byzantine text-type, the form of the Greek New Testament in the largest number of surviving manuscripts, Robinson would use the corollary to explain differences from the Majority Text as scribal errors that were not perpetuated because they were known to be errant or because they existed only in a small number of manuscripts at the time.

Most textual-critical scholars would explain the corollary by the assumption that scribes tended to "correct" harder readings and so cut off the stream of transmission. Thus, only earlier manuscripts would have the harder readings. Later manuscripts would not see the corollary principle as being a very important one to get closer to the original form of the text.

However, lectio difficilior is not to be taken as an absolute rule either but as a general guideline. "In general the more difficult reading is to be preferred" is Bruce Metzger's reservation.[10] "There is truth in the maxim: lectio difficilior lectio potior ('the more difficult reading is the more probable reading')", write Kurt and Barbara Aland.[11]

However, for scholars like Kurt Aland, who follow a path of reasoned eclecticism based on evidence both internal and external to the manuscripts, "this principle must not be taken too mechanically, with the most difficult reading (lectio difficillima) adopted as original simply because of its degree of difficulty".[12] Also, Martin Litchfield West cautions: "When we choose the 'more difficult reading'... we must be sure that it is in itself a plausible reading. The principle should not be used in support of dubious syntax, or phrasing that it would not have been natural for the author to use. There is an important difference between a more difficult reading and a more unlikely reading".[13]

See also

References

  1. Maurice A. Robinson, "New Testament Textual Criticism: The Case for Byzantine Priority", 2001.
  2. Tov, Emanuel (October 1982). "Criteria for Evaluating Textual Readings: The Limitations of Textual Rules". Harvard Theological Review. 75 (4): 429–448 esp. pp. 439ff. doi:10.1017/S0017816000031540. S2CID 165577319. Retrieved 2012-12-16.
  3. Bentley, Jerry H. (1978). "Erasmus, Jean Le Clerc, and the Principle of the Harder Reading". Renaissance Quarterly. 31 (3): 309–321. doi:10.2307/2860228. ISSN 0034-4338.
  4. Page 117 in Trovato, P. (2014). Everything You Always Wanted to Know about Lachmann's Method. libreriauniversitaria.it.
  5. Noted in an observation by Frederick Henry Ambrose Scrivener in A Plain Introduction to the Criticism of the New testament (E. Miller, ed. 1894: vol. ii, p. 247) by W. L. Lorimer, "Lectio Difficilior", The Classical Review 48.5 (November 1934:171).
  6. E.g. by H. J. Rose in The Classical Review 48 (126, note 2), corrected by Lorimer 1934.
  7. Tov 1982:432.
  8. A. E. Housman, "The Application of Thought to Textual Criticism", Proceedings of the Classical Association 18 (1922), pp. 67–84. DOI https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8247611
  9. Robinson 2001
  10. Italics supplied. Bruce Metzger, The Text of the New Testament, II.i.1, p. 209.
  11. Aland, The Text of the New Testament, pp. 275–276; the Alands' twelve basic principles of textual criticism are reported on-line.
  12. Aland 1995, p. 276.
  13. West 1973, p. 51.

Further reading

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