If there is
one thing I have learned during my PhD years, it is one has to have patience
in scholarship.
In February
2011 I started my PhD in NT conjectural criticism. One of the things that
struck me is that though there obviously are different kinds of conjectures, no
one had ever come up with a comprehensive classification (neither in classical
studies). I decided to give it a try. In the summer of 2011, when I started to
register NT conjectures in our database, I labelled every conjecture,
continuously changing the labels, grouping, separating, defining and
re-defining. By the end of the summer I
thought I had it: there were, in sum, eleven conjecture types. I hardly couldn’t
wait to present it to the team (Jan Krans, Silvia Castelli and Bert Jan
Lietaert Peerbolte). Fortunately, they were enthusiastic about it.
But in the
weeks that followed, I became dissatisfied with the fact that whereas most
categories described types of problems conjectures can solve, some categories
described causes of corruption undone by conjectures. I remember exactly
where we walked in the university building the moment Jan suggested to work
with two dimensions in the classification: problems and causes. I immediately
knew that was it! But how does that work, a classification with more than one
dimension? I started to study the theory of classification, and I realized I
had always been restricting myself to a certain form of classification, namely a
taxonomy.
In a
taxonomy, an object can occupy only one place in a hierarchical system:
classifying a dog in a taxonomy of animals means positioning it at one of the
branches of a tree, by means of characterizing it according to certain
variables which are considered in sequence. However, there is also a more
complex form of classification: a typology. An example of a typology would be
the characterization of a group of people according to their gender as well as
to the colour of their hair. Each individual is not positioned within a
hierarchical structure, as in a taxonomy, but characterised according to two
variables that are considered in parallel, instead of in sequence.
We needed a
typology! The argumentation for each conjecture necessarily has two
dimensions, the detection of a problem (in the transmitted text) and the
suggestion of a cause of the supposed corruption (that is, a certain type of
scribal error/change). Just like people could be classified according to
their gender as well as to the colour of their hair, so conjectures can be
classified according to the problem involved and the cause indicated.
Working with a typology not only allowed us to include both dimensions. It also provided a way out of a dilemma that had been bothering me from the start: what to do with conjectures based on multiple problems? It is impossible to render something like that in a taxonomy, and my initial solution, the idea of an essential problem for each conjecture, is untenable. In a typology, by contrast, things can be characterised by several categories within the same variable at once.
Working with a typology not only allowed us to include both dimensions. It also provided a way out of a dilemma that had been bothering me from the start: what to do with conjectures based on multiple problems? It is impossible to render something like that in a taxonomy, and my initial solution, the idea of an essential problem for each conjecture, is untenable. In a typology, by contrast, things can be characterised by several categories within the same variable at once.
During that
season there have been several moments I really thought: now it’s finished.
But again and again some conjecture popped up that posed a problem and called
for an adjustment of categories or definitions. Interestingly, most of the time
such adjustments made the classification more straightforward, often making me wonder why that didn't occur to me earlier.
I think the
classification was finalised by the summer of 2012, and shortly after we also finished an article on it. So that first year I had learned that patience was
needed when developing such a thing as a classification. The two and a half
year that followed I received another lesson in patience: submitting an
article, waiting a few months, being told the article is too long, submitting
it elsewhere, being told again the article is too long, cutting down the number
of words significantly, submitting it again, waiting half a year, being told
the article is accepted (with only a few minor comments), waiting for more than
a year, having it published, finding out several subscribing institutions are
not provided full-text access to the issue concerned, having your librarian
contacting the publisher, and then, this week, learning the problem is solved.
So here it is: “Sleepy
Scribes and Clever Critics: A Classification of Conjectures on the Text of the
New Testament.”
In forthcoming
publications of our team, such as my dissertation on the NT
conjectural criticism of Jan Hendrik Holwerda (1805-1886), the classification will
come into action!