The Mishnah : religious perspectives

書誌事項

The Mishnah : religious perspectives

by Jacob Neusner

(Handbuch der Orientalistik = Handbook of Oriental studies, 1. Abt. . Der Nahe und Mittlere Osten ; Bd. 45)

Brill, 1999

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注記

"... this book completes the condensation and recapitulation of large-scale research of mine"--Pref

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Condensing research concerning questions of religion which encompass the social history of ideas and the religious uses of language, this book deals with three questions: the relationship of the Mishnah to Scripture, the relationship of the religious ideas people hold to the world in which they live, and the religious meaning of the formalization of language that characterizes the Mishnah in particular. This publication has also been published in paperback, please click here for details.

目次

1. THE MISHNAH AND SCRIPTURE i. Category-Formations of the Halakhah Wholly Framed by the Written Torah a) Horayot b. Negaim c. Pesahim d. Shebuot e. Sotah f. Sukkah g. Yoma ii. What the Oral Torah Did Not Contribute iii. Category-Formations of the Halakhah Wholly Defined within the Oral Torah iv. Categories that Encompass in their System Facts Set forth in Scripture [1] Berakhot v. Categories that Encompass in their System Facts Set forth in Scripture: [2] Taanit vi. The Oral Torah Forms a Category out of Scripture(1)s Topic: Tamid vii. Categories beyond Scripture(1)s Framework but Subordinate to Scripture(1)s Own Categories: Demai viii. The Oral Torah(1)s Own Categories [1]: Scripture(1)s Imperatives without Scripture(1)s Facts. Tohorot ix. The Oral Torah(1)s Own Categories: [2] Uqsin x. The Oral Torah(1)s Own Categories: [3] Ketubot xi. The Oral Torah(1)s Original Categories: [4] Qiddushin xii. The Oral Torah(1)s Original Categories xiii. The Oral Torah Systematizes the Written Torah(1)s Category-Formations, Spirit and Letter Alike: The Four Interstitial Categories a. Subordinate but Not Concentric Expositions of the Same Category-Formations b. Received Topics, Innovative Compositions of Category-Formations Thereof c. Received Letter, New Spirit: The Asymmetrical Category-Formations of the Oral Torah d. A Fresh Statement out of a Familiar Topic and Routine Exposition thereof xiv. Same Spirit, Same Letter < But Lots More Letters a. Abodah Zarah b. Arakhin c. Bekhorot d. Bikkurim e. Keritot f. Maaser Sheni g. Meilah h. Menahot i. Nedarim-Nazir j. Peah k. Rosh Hashanah l. Shebi(1)it m. Sheqalim n. Yebamot xv. Where the Letter Gives Life to the Spirit xvi. Types of Independent Exposition of Received Category-Formations. When the Oral Torah Reorganizes the Written Torah(1)s Category-Formation a. Baba Qamma-Baba Mesia-Baba Batra b. Hagigah c. Kelim d. Megillah e. Miqvaot f. Sanhedrin-Makkot g. Zebahim xvii. Kaleidoscopic Discourse xviii. Same Letter, New Spirit: When the Oral Torah Asks its Own Questions about the Written Torah(1)s Topical Program a. Besah b. Erubin c. Gittin d. Hallah e. Hullin f. Moed Qatan g. Maaserot h. Makhshirin i. Ohalot j. Parah k. Shabbat xix. Old Dog, New Tricks xx. When the Oral Torah Finds Fresh Issues in Received Information a. Kilayim b. Orlah c. Tebul Yom d. Temurah e. Terumot f. Yadayim g. Zabim and Niddah xxi. Original Variations on Borrowed Themes 2. THE MISHNAH AND ITS TIMES: THE THREE STAGES OF HALAKHIC CATEGORY-FORMATION i. The Starting Point: Second Temple Times ii. Methodological Foundations: Correlating Sequences of Sages with Sequences of Rulings iii. Rabbinic Judaism in Second Temple Times? iv. The Phenomenological Reading: A quo v. The Historical Reading: Ad Quem vi. Constructing Categories for Comparison and Contrast: The Systemic Approach vii. The Formative History of the Halakhic Category-Formations vii. The Halakhah before 70 viii. The Interim-Category-Formation: The Halakhah between the Wars of 66-70 and 132-135 ix. The Halakhah of the Mid-Second Century: The Halakhah(1)s Fully-Realized Category-Formation in Structure and System x. The Oral Torah Seen Whole: The Restoration of Eden through the Reconstruction of Israel(1)s Social Order xi. One Whole Torah, Oral and Written? 3. FORM AND MEANING IN THE MISHNAH i. Formulation and Transmission of the Mishnah: By Whom, For What? ii. Rhetoric and Reality iii. Form and Meaning iv. Language, Reality, and Power v. Language Becomes Ontology

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