Law and Self-Knowledge in the Talmud
Cambridge University Press, 5/31/2018
EAN 9781108427494, ISBN10: 1108427499
Hardcover, 237 pages, 23.5 x 15.7 x 1.9 cm
Language: English
This book examines the emergence of self-knowledge as a determining legal consideration among the rabbis of Late Antiquity, from the third to the seventh centuries CE. Based on close readings of rabbinic texts from Palestine and Babylonia, Ayelet Hoffmann Libson highlights a unique and surprising development in Talmudic jurisprudence, whereby legal decision-making incorporated personal and subjective information. She examines the central legal role accorded to individuals' knowledge of their bodies and mental states in areas of law as diverse as purity laws, family law and the laws of Sabbath. By focusing on subjectivity and self-reflection, the Babylonian rabbis transformed earlier legal practices in a way that cohered with the cultural concerns of other religious groups in Late Antiquity. They developed sophisticated ideas about the inner self and incorporated these notions into their distinctive discourse of law.
1. The inward turn in rabbinic literature
2. Knowledge of the body
the case of sensation
3. Asserting the needs of the body
4. Between body and mind
the suffering self
5. Self-knowledge and a wife's autonomy.