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<a style="font-family:Trebuchet MS, Arial, sans-serif;font-size:18px;" href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Aspaqlaria/~3/193050480/halachic-process-interlude-what-it-isnt.shtml">Halachic Process, interlude: What it isn’t</a>
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<span>Posted:</span> 30 Nov 2007 11:11 AM CST</p>
<div style="margin:0;font-family:Times New Roman, Times, serif;line-height:140%;font-size:12px;color:#000000;"><p><font size="-1"><strong>(I am going to do something I try to avoid when writing in public — dedicate a post to criticism. This post may someday disappear, if I ever change my mind, so read it now while you can.)</strong></font></p>
<p>The story so far: In <a href="http://www.aishdas.org/asp/2007/11/halachic-process-part-i.shtml">part I</a>, I suggested that the process of <em>pesaq</em> isn’t a set of rules to be followed, but a set of rules that define pros and cons that the <em>poseiq</em> must weigh. In most cases, the difference is irrelevent But in complex cases (all the interesting ones), a rigid algorithm can not handle conflicts in values, the complexity of the real world. The heustic therefore adds more voice to halakhah by allowing some guidelines beyond those cases. Most of the previous post was dedicated to a philosophical discussion of why the A-lmighty would choose this system.</p>
<p>I had originally planned to continue with examples and details, flushing out the system. However, preliminary discussions about this notion led me to conclude it may be more useful to start out by defining what adding fuzzy edges to the system doesn’t do. How does this not simply lead to anarchy? I think this question is sufficiently pressing to deserve an interruption before drilling down into the details.</p>
<p>So, even though we inherently can’t articulate the weights one uses in judging the various conflicting desirata, here are some criteria they must meet:</p>
<ol>
<li>Honesty</li>
<li>Consistency</li>
<li>Loyal to Traditional Priorities</li>
<li>Formally sound</li>
<li>Produced from within a Torah gestalt</li>
<li>Produced to find how to serve Hashem, not some other goal</li>
</ol>
<p>But that’s too vague to be usable even as mottos. I therefore had to rely on examples for illustration. So, taking from using the Conservative legal process (hereafter “C”) and a couple of other examples as a foil to help explain these limits, this is what the halachic process isn’t:</p>
<p><strong>1- Dishonesty: </strong>Obviously, dishonesty does not create valid <em>halakhah</em>. The few C responsa I have looked at have flaws such as partial quoting, or quoting a <em>hava amina</em> (a rejected suggestion) as though it was a conclusion.</p>
<p>For example, in Silverman’s responsum allowing pasteurized wine as <em>yayin mevushal</em>, he cites a <em>teshuvah</em> from the Rama. In it, the Rama deals with the question of how to treat the Jews of Moravia, who were willing to drink <em>stam yeinam</em>. At no point in time does the Rama say they are right for doing so, but he does conclude that since the current generation learnt this sin from their parents and grandparents, they are mistaken, not rebellious, and should not be categorized as <em>mumarim</em>. Silverman uses this as precedent for being lenient on <em>stam yeinam</em> itself.</p>
<p><strong>2- Inconsistency: </strong>C will use conflicting weighting systems depending on the desired answer. Internal consistency is a clearly defined requirement, only a shade less self-evident than the need for honesty. As I wrote in the previous entry:</p>
<blockquote><p>Someone who changes the weights to find a desired result is no longer simplifying an Infinite Truth to fit it into this universe. Different shadows of the same object are each valid. But if you trace the shadow while changing the direction of the lighting mid-stream, you are left with a picture something that isn’t a shadow of the original.</p></blockquote>
<p>One can’t be self-contradictory in <em>halachic </em>ruling. To take an Orthodox example, the normal observance of <em>omer</em> is not to listen to music during some part of the <em>omer</em>. And therefore most people will not put a music station on the radio during that period. But they might throw a party, but not hire a musician for it. According to R’ YB Soloveitchik, the primary problem is partying, that music was cited because until recorded music, it was generally associated with celebration. Therefore his students do listen to music on the radio, but should not throw a party even without a musician. It would be inconsistent for someone to both listen to music privately, and attend parties that have no musicians.</p>
<p>The same is true in process. For example, many (but a decreasing number) Orthodox women do not cover their hair outside of the context of synagogue, because they believe there is a mimetic tradition, a <em>minhag avos</em>, of doing so. Therefore, it must be justifiable, even if we don’t know how. (This argument is flawed in that even back in Lithuania where this was the norm, it was acknowledged that it was an error for married women not to cover their hair. The rabbis complained, albeit most — including many of their wives — didn’t listen.) Meanwhile, there are Orthodox women looking to organize Women’s Prayer Groups, crafting a way to innovate a ritual service for women that fits the letter of <em>halakhah </em>(as their rabbis decide it).</p>
<p>I would argue, that this pair is procedurally inconsistent. If someone feels that mimetic tradition is the more weighty concern, then how can one innovate a kind of prayer service our ancestors would not have? And if instead one looks primarily at what is formally permitted in the texts, how can one not cover her hair after marriage? Perhaps one can draw a distinction between the two cases on other grounds, despite their similarity of domain, but the argument (flawed or not) illustrates what I mean by the need for procedural consistency.</p>
<p><strong>3- Ignoring the Important: </strong>C will fail to weight matters that are indisputably important.</p>
<p>Example: C denies that the Torah was necessarily dictated by the A-lmighty, and therefore Torah law and particularly those Torah laws derived by <em>derashah</em> are considered the products of human invention. Therefore, even the distinction between Torah and Rabbinic law can be overlooked if they want to outweigh a Torah prohibition.</p>
<p>Or, <em>amoraim</em> were unwilling/unable to dispute the conclusions reached by <em>tanaim</em>, assuming we’re not just talking about choosing one <em>tanna</em>’s position over another. Notably, the <em>gemara </em>often takes the time to point out “<em>Rav tanna hu upalig</em> — Rav counts as a <em>tanna</em>, and so could disgree.” and argue with tannaim despite not being Rav. In numerous places an amora’s position is questioned on the grounds “<em>vehatenan</em> — but didn’t the <em>tanna </em>say otherwise?” The inability to dispute a <em>tanna </em>was a given.</p>
<p>Similarly, with the closing of the <em>talmud</em> we are told that “<em>Ravina veRav Ashi sof hora’ah — </em>Ravina and Rav Ashi, the compilers of the gemara, were the end of real halachic decisionmaking.</p>
<p>The line between <em>rishon</em> and <em>acharon</em> is less clearly defined, and many hold it’s a matter of convention and respect, not authority. This is how we can have exceptions, like students of the Vilna Gaon or of the Ba’al Shem Tov, claiming their mentor as a “throwback” to the greater times. (Someone who managed to recover some of the Sinai culture, so that they “speak the language” more like a native than their era would indicate.)</p>
<p>But there is unanimity that <em>rishonim</em>’s opinions get much more weight than those of (nearly all) <em>acharonim</em>, and that one must invoke one of the modes of <a href="http://www.aishdas.org/asp/2007/11/halachic-change.shtml">halachic change</a> to explain how one can defy what seems to be the precedent by Chazal (<em>tannaim </em>and <em>amoraim</em>). In other words, the dictum that they are “<em>sof hora’ah</em>” means that their opinions get SO much weight as to be indistinguishable from an absolute rule in the algorithmic sense that we can not defy their conclusions.</p>
<p>C responsa are willing to dispute mishnaic and talmudic conclusions.</p>
<p>An Orthodox example: Nearly all <em>poseqim </em>(with the exception of R’ Rackman) are not willing to anul a marriage. The <em>gemara</em> has 5 cases in which the court can anul a marriage, based on the notion that “<em>kol demeqadeish adaas derabbanan meqadeish</em> — anyone who weds does so on the acknowledgment of the rabbis.” (The standard wedding formula makes this explicit, as we have the groom say “according to the rite of Moshe and Yisrael.” But it’s a presumed condition on marriage even without this declaration.) But we find that there are nearly no examples of this being applied after the <em>geonic</em> era. And every application is not a by-case decision, but a general rule. Such as “Anyone who weds in a bar, we annul the marriage.” Today, one would have to ask, which rabbis does this conditional refer to? There is no historic community which anulled qidushin - and the possibility for a halachically married couple not being legally married (by civil law) has existed since slightly before the Emancipation!</p>
<p>Why? Because <em>aishes ish</em> (having relations with a married woman) and <em>mamzeirus</em> are very weighty issues. They can’t simply be ignored, even for the sake of the poor women whose husbands abuse the system to make them <em>agunos</em>. At some point, there is no dispute that one is working with misplaced priorities.</p>
<p>And so, R’ JB Soloveitchik broke from norm, and the only time he condemned the actions of one of his students in public was when Rabbi Rackman established a <em>beis din</em> that would anull such marriages.</p>
<p><strong>4- Formally Unsound. </strong>C will weight “textual” factors, formal rules that simply are invented of whole cloth.</p>
<p>Such as their rule that the Committee on Law and Jewish Standards (their central lawmaking body) does not decide law by majority vote. Rather, any minority of at least 6 members is considered a valid alternative. This voting model simply has no precedent or place in the halachic process.</p>
<p><strong>5- Not produced from within Torah:</strong> C values objectivity, and therefore end up trying NOT to bring the right gestalt / da’as Torah to the process.</p>
<p>C conflates rabbinics with modern notions of scholarship. However, the point of a scholar is to understand a topic objectively, from the outside. The purpose of <em>talmud Torah</em> is to internalize the values and priorities conveyed in the Torah.</p>
<p>Therefore, the inarticulatable part of the system, the proper weighing of pros and cons, is impossible.</p>
<p>E.g. There is a concept when it comes to eating kosher that non-kosher food is “<em>metamteim es haleiv</em> — closes up the heart”. (Whether one understands this mystically, or as a a psychological statement about people who do not try to elevate their eating to be more than that of an animal aside.) The C rabbi is incapable of feeling this tradition in his bones, because he was taught to learn the notion with an attempt at precision coming from cold detachment. And therefore, the C rabbinate was far more lenient on matters of <em>kashrus</em> than O would be.</p>
<p><strong>5b- Ends-driven to non-Torah goals.</strong> C is “ends driven”, trying to get the desired pesaq. With this model in hand, I would now say that C is using values to weight their decisions that are more Western than rooted in aggadita. (Which is how C can seem to end up wherever R does, just 15 years later.) By adopting historical school beliefs, they invent a history of weighting things that bears no resemblance to <em>halakhah</em> but rather political power ploys. Both between rabbinic schools and to accommodate the masses.</p>
<p>Recently C decided that women could serve as witnesses (in matters beyond determining permissability; e.g. to validate a wedding), entirely on the grounds that once it allowed them to be rabbis and cantors, drawing the line at witnessing is absurd. This was simply an acknowledgement that they imported the modern western version of Egalitarianism into their judgement system, aside from the procedural problems mentioned above in ignoring Chazal’s decision without showing how it wouldn’t apply.</p>
<p>In the next (and last) post in this series, I will drill down into the details of the model and show how this description of how <em>halakhah </em>is made conforms to various famous halachic decisions.</p><div class="feedflare">
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