- Wed Aug 29, 2018 3:09 pm
#53448
Adam Tyson wrote:I would read that "minor" as applying to both the copying errors and the corruptions, Franny, but even if we don't, you've hit the nail on the head in that we don't know how corrupted the texts are. We do know that the tone, vocab, and details in the two works are very different, and the issues raised in answer B are not likely to be enough to account for all that much variation.Thank you Adam. Your explanation/analogy helped me understand the question better. I'm still not 100% certain of why B is wrong, but I definitely understand why C is more correct.
Also, would those errors, even if they were substantial, really hurt the claim that they were not both written by Homer? Wouldn't we be left wondering even more? it could cut either way - maybe the two works are even more different than we thought! If it could strengthen and could weaken, and it all depends on you choosing to interpret it one way and not another, then it's not a good choice for either question type. Don't pick an answer that needs your help!
Think of answer C as setting up an analogy. "Modern" isn't the issue - it's the comparison that matters. If we know that one author wrote two certain current works, and those two works differ substantially in the same way the Iliad and Odyssey differ, then by analogy we can say that perhaps those two ancient works were also written by one person, Homer. It doesn't prove it, but it tells us that it is possible for one writer to vary that much. That's some help.