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Talmudic culture is often viewed as bound by its traditions, both by people who accept the authority of the Talmud and by those who do not. In contrast to this view, Menachem Fisch maintains that a close reading of talmudic texts frequently reveals their authors as rabbis who, rather than conform uncritically to tradition, knowingly set out to expose and resolve problems inherent in the received traditions.
Rational Rabbis describes an essential similarity between Athens and Jerusalem - between the rationality underlying the enterprise of western science and that of talmudic reasoning. More than faithful curators of a static tradition, talmudic antitraditionalists saw themselves much as scientists might see themselves today - as intellectuals whose job was to find flaws in time-honored theories, and to act rationally to improve upon them.
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Rational rabbis: science and Talmudic culture
1997, Indiana University Press
in English
0253333164 9780253333162
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Rational Rabbis: Science and Talmudic Culture
1997, Indiana University Press
in English
0253112834 9780253112835
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Rational Rabbis: Science and Talmudic Culture
1997, Indiana University Press
in English
0585207712 9780585207711
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