Results 181 to 190 of about 7,643 (227)

Talmud

open access: yes, 2010
The prejudices against the Talmud in medieval and modern times have only been superseded the last fifty ...
Mark Popovsky, Poorthuis, Marcel
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Talmud: Making a Case for Talmud Pedagogy—The Talmud as an Educational Model

2011
The Babylonian Talmud (Bavli) stands at the canonical center of Jewish tradition. Composed between the third and seventh centuries C.E., the Bavli has been and continues to be studied in a variety of contexts, ranging from religious academies (yeshivot) to modern secular universities.
Marjorie Lehman, Jane Kanarek
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Cleft Lip in the Talmud

Annals of Plastic Surgery, 2000
The authors address the problem of why the cleft lip anomalad is not mentioned even once in the Talmud, which contains detailed reports of numerous other forms of pathology and congenital anomalies. It also attempts to define the Sandal deformity, one of the most common congenital anomalies mentioned in the Talmud.
M, Westreich, S, Segal
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What is Taught in Talmud Class: Is it Class or is it Talmud?

Journal of Jewish Education, 2009
This article presents an empirical study of a seventh-grade Talmud class in a religious boys' school in Israel. This case study touches upon and attempts to elucidate aspects of several broader areas. It is fundamentally an example of the transmission of culture, values, and culturally valued text in a schooling context, which exists within a larger ...
Aliza Segal, Zvi Bekerman
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Talmud

2020
The prejudices against the Talmud in medieval and modern times have only been superseded the last fifty ...
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Orthodoxy and Talmudic Criticism? On Misleading Attributions in the Talmud

Zutot, 2016
Critical approaches to the Talmud flourished among liberal elements in nineteenth-century Jewry. Scholars whose aim was to introduce further alterations to Jewish law found backing for their agenda in their scientific treatment of the Talmud, emphasizing the dynamic transmission of this central Jewish tradition.
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Liver Disease in the Talmud

Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology, 1990
Diseases of the liver have been of interest to physicians throughout the ages. There are references to hepatic diseases in ancient writings on medicine as far back as the Egyptian papyrii (1). In this article, I deal with the multiple references to the liver and liver disease that are found in the books of the Talmud.
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Logotherapy and talmudic Judaism

Journal of Religion & Health, 1975
Any attempt to correlate logotherapy with some religious group or set of religious ideals is fraught with difficulty, mainly because of the dimensional gap that indicates that logotherapy, as a psychotherapy, and religion work from incommensurate frameworks. Frankl's rightful insistence that logotherapy is a secular theory and practice only accentuates
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The Talmud

1989
This volume sheds light on the early rabbis as the shapers of religion and uncovers for the modern reader the early Sages' fundamental beliefs concerning God, the world and the human condition.
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