Booktopia has been placed into Voluntary Administration. Orders have been temporarily suspended, whilst the process for the recapitalisation of Booktopia and/or sale of its business is completed, following which services may be re-established. All enquiries from creditors, including customers with outstanding gift cards and orders and placed prior to 3 July 2024, please visit https://www.mcgrathnicol.com/creditors/booktopia-group/
Add free shipping to your order with these great books
Circumventing the Law : Rabbinic Perspectives on Loopholes and Legal Integrity - Elana Stein Hain

Circumventing the Law

Rabbinic Perspectives on Loopholes and Legal Integrity

By: Elana Stein Hain

eBook | 20 January 2024

At a Glance

eBook


RRP $87.99

$79.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $20.00 with

Instant Digital Delivery to your Booktopia Reader App

Circumventing the Law probes the rabbinic logic behind the use of loopholes, the legal phenomenon of finding and using gaps within law to achieve otherwise illegal outcomes. The logic of ha'aramah, a subset of rabbinic legal circumventions mostly defined as a tool for private life, underpins both well-known circumventions, such as selling leaven before Passover, and lesser-known mechanisms, such as designating an animal intended for sacrifice "blemished" before birth to allow it to be slaughtered for food instead. Elana Stein Hain traces the development of these loopholes over time, revealing that rabbinic literature does not consistently accept or reject loopholes. Instead, rabbinic Judaism applies categories of evasion (prohibited), avoidance (permitted), and avoision (contested) to loopholes on a case-by-case basis. The intended outcome of a given loophole determines its classification, as does the legal integrity of the circumventive process in question.

Yet these understandings of loopholes are not static—instead, rabbinic attitudes toward loopholing change over time. Early works display an objective, performative understanding of the self and of intention, but evolve over time to reflect more subjective and intimate understanding of the self and intention. This evolution redefines what legal integrity means in Jewish legal philosophy.

Circumventing the Law brings readers through the Second Temple period to the modern era to see how loopholing has evolved over millennia. With a focus on late antiquity, Stein Hain explores tannaitic literature, the Palestinian Talmud, and contemporaneous Greco-Roman and Persian thought to show that when warranted, Jewish rhetoric and philosophy around understandings of loopholes was a unique phenomenon that relied on changes in understanding the definition of integrity itself, a key finding for scholars of Jewish Studies and of religious and of secular law writ large.

on

More in Social & Cultural History

Parental Advisory : Music Censorship in America - Eric D. Nuzum

eBOOK

Life in a Medieval Castle : Medieval Life - Joseph Gies

eBOOK

RRP $28.59

$22.99

20%
OFF
Never Again? : The Threat of the New Anti-Semitism - Abraham H. Foxman

eBOOK

A History of New York in 101 Objects - Sam Roberts

eBOOK

RRP $39.59

$31.99

19%
OFF
Sun Bear : The Path of Power - Sunbear

eBOOK

RRP $31.89

$25.99

19%
OFF
Bourbon : A History of the American Spirit - Dane Huckelbridge

eBOOK

RRP $28.59

$22.99

20%
OFF