the Critical Text (Westcott-Hort recension) statistical charade of false %s began with Hort and continues today

Steven Avery

Administrator
sister threads

the Critical Text (Westcott-Hort recension) statistical charade of false %s began with Hort and continues today
https://www.purebibleforum.com/index.php/threads/a.973/post-2149

statistical illiteracy in textual scholarship - Daniel Wallace struggles with numbers
https://www.purebibleforum.com/index.php/threads/a.294


statistical illiteracy in textual scholarship - Norman Geisler struggles with numbers
[URL="https://www.purebibleforum.com/index.php/threads/a.977https://www.purebibleforum.com/index.php/threads/a.977[/URL]

We might add one on how Wallace corrected the really absurd errors of Geisler et. al. on the number of variants.
See also:

statistical charlatans used to support Bible text confusions
https://www.purebibleforum.com/index.php/threads/a.492
The statistical charade tries to pretend various things.

a) the text is settled 98%, 99.5%, etc.
b) there is not much difference with the Received Text and the Critical Text
 

Steven Avery

Administrator
First we will simply give some references.

Show Jack McElroy page.


Facebook - Jack McElroy
King James Bible Debate
https://www.facebook.com/groups/21209666692/permalink/10153348088886693/

Claims like the 99.5% one (remember Ivory Soap) are really simply demonstrations of statistical illiteracy. I highlighted one such example of "How to Lie With Statistics" from a paper from Daniel Wallace. You are right about the supposed little leaven, but there are 1,000s of hortian corruptions in 8,000 verses including about 45 verses missing in the Critical Text. And these are often highly salient doctrinal corruptions, like the Mark ending, John 1:18, 1 Timothy 3:16, the heavenly witnesses, and much more. The .5% number is simply ... statistical illiteracy.

There is a whole mangle upon mangle comedy of statistical errors here.

Hort gave you this turgid nonsense:
https://books.google.com/books?id=gZ4HAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA2

"The proportion of words virtually accepted on all hands as raised above doubt is very great, not less, on a rough computation, than seven eighths of the whole. The remaining eighth therefore, formed in great part by changes of order and other comparative trivialities, constitutes the whole area of criticisrn. If the principles followed in the present edition are sound, this area may be very greatly reduced. Recognising to the full the duty of abstinence from peremptory decision in cases where the evidence leaves the judgement in suspense between two or more readings, we find that, setting aside differences of orthography, the words in our opinion still subject to doubt only make up about one sixtieth of the whole New Testament."

1/60 of the NT would be the equivalent of about 120 full verses, a reduction from the actual thousands of significant variants. I'll see if I can find the lineage to the later and greater absurdities.

This type of nonsense quote became popular

Biblical Hermenutics: A Treatise on the Interpretation of the Old and New Testaments
Milton Spenser Terry
https://books.google.com/books?id=UQ8_AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA132
Maurice Robinson has been involved with these numbers, in a much stronger way, starting here.

New Testament Textual Criticism: The Case for Byzantine Priority
Maurice A. Robinson
http://rosetta.reltech.org/TC/v06/Robinson2001.html

I'll plan on extending a whole section.
 

Steven Avery

Administrator
Hort to Heide - let's deceive the Christians pure Bible beleivers

James Snapp dealt with some of the Hortian stuff, but did not nail the circularity.

[textualcriticism] 99.5% Reliability and the "Dark Age" of the Text
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/textualcriticism/conversations/topics/4200
On Behalf Of James Snapp, Jr.

Sent: Tuesday, November 04, 2008 3:21 PM

Dr. Ehrman:

The claim that the revised text securely preserves 99.9% of the original text can be traced to F.J.A. Hort, who wrote in 1881,

"The books of the New Testament as preserved in extant documents assuredly speak to us in every important respect in language identical with that in which they spoke to those for whom they were originally written," and,

"The proportion of words virtually accepted on all hands as raised above doubt is very great, not less, on a rough computation, than seven eighths of the whole. The remaining eighth therefore, formed in great part by changes of order and other comparative trivialities, constitutes the whole area of criticism," and,

"The amount of what can in any sense be called substantial variation is but a small fraction of the whole residuary variation, and can hardly form more than a thousandth part of the entire text."

You asked how Fadie came up with the claim about 99.5% number.

Well, how did Hort come up with the claim about 99.9%? By conducting textual criticism upon the extant witnesses and drawing conclusions about how much of the text could be securely reconstructed (99.9%) and how much of the text could not be securely reconstructed (.1%).
Here is where K. Martin Heide accepted the Hort charade. Let's watch the shell game.

The Reliability of the New Testament
Assessing the Stability of the Transmitted Texts of the New Testament and the Shepherd of Hermas (2011)
K. Martin Heide
https://books.google.com/books?id=UaRkR3WI0rYC&pg=PA126


How stably or unstably was the text of the New Testament transmitted? The different editions of the Greek text of the New Testament already provide us with a rough indication for estimating the stability of the text. Almost 5,000 of the 7,947 verses of the New Testament, as contained in the major text-critical editions in the last 150 years (Tischendorf, Westcott-Hort, von Soden, Vogels, Merk, Bover, Nestle-Aland), show no differences at all in the text.1 Can the stability of the New Testament text be defined more accurately?2 After thirty years of intensively researching the text, Westcott and Hort provided the following evaluation of the New Testament transmission: according to their representation, at least seven-eighths of the text is accurate and requires no further text-critical research.3 Clarity exists therefore in this portion of the transmitted text. The outstanding 12.5 percent or one-eighth remains subject to textual criticism. This 12.5 percent, however, consists mostly of minor variants with no alteration of the meaning of the text itself and, according to Westcott and Hort, has already been sufficiently clarified. This in turn leaves a marginal percentage (one-sixtieth of the text that, according to Westcott and Hort, is unclear and should be regarded as subject to further research.
How dumb and circular can you get.

Only include editions that omit the Mark ending, the Pericope Adulterae, "Father forgive them" and tons of historic and well-supported scripture, and then begin an analysis from that point.

As a humorous aside, ignore the fact that two Tischendord editions had about 1,000 differences, his text changed with his Sinaiticus veneration.

The textcrits take the seminarians and Bible believers for fools. The seminarians generally live up to the expectations.

=========================

(Searching for "one sixtieth" or "seven eighths of the whole" or "a thousandth part" and "Hort" finds similar examples. K. Martin Heide is one of the brighter textcrits, yet he still deceives his readers completely on this issue.)

My hope is to come back to this and put it together in a more orderly form.
And I do believe the Heide quote is sufficient to show the ongoing deception.
 
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