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The Unique Judicial Vision of Rabbi Meir Simcha of Dvinsk
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18 August 2016

Judaism: sacred texts and revered writings
Introduction
Chapter 1: Midrashic Technique and Legal Creativity in the Meshekh Hokhmah
Introduction
1. R. Meir Simcha and the Use of Midrashic Technique to Develop the Law
a. Traditional Reluctance to Use Midrashic Technique to Develop the Law
b. R. Meir Simcha’s Pioneering Adoption of Midrashic Technique to Develop the Law
2. Rejection of R. Meir Simcha’s Rulings Based on Midrashic Technique
a. One Who Kills Someone in the Throes of Death
b. The Amalekite Proselyte
c. Exhuming and Moving a Corpse
d. Self-endangerment to Save the Nation
e. Concluding Remarks
3. Acceptance of R. Meir Simcha’s Exegesis-Based Rulings
a. The Prohibition against Rebuilding Jericho
b. Inheriting Property from a Relative One Has Murdered
c. Bathsheba and Uriah the Hittite—Conditional Divorce
d. The “If Two Do It” Exemption
4. The Normative Intent of R. Meir Simcha’s Exegesis-Based Legal Creativity
a. The Prohibition against Abortion: Biblical or Rabbinic?
b. Acts Carried Out by One Who Is Inebriated
5. Gilat’s Assessment of R. Meir Simcha’s Intent
a. Marrying a “Beautiful Captive”
b. Stealing from Outside the Owner’s Domain
6. Supportive Midrashic Exegesis
a. Children of a Convert
b. Sanctity of the Temple Mount
Conclusion
Chapter 2: The Rabbinic Decisors and the Halakhic Material in Or Sameah
Introduction
1. Expanding Maimonides’ Ruling
a. A Pursuer Who Kills by Gerama
b. Disabling a Mechanical Heart
2. Supplementing Maimonides’ Ruling by Adding One Detail
a. The Pursuer
b. One Who Murders a Person in his Death Throes
c. Saving the Entire Nation of Israel
3. Transforming Legal Ground
a. One Who Takes his Ex-Wife Back: From Prohibition to Remorse
b. Laws of Jealousy and Seclusion: Textual-Criticism Approaches
c. Laws of Jealousy and Seclusion According to the Received Text
4. The Rabbinic Decisors and R. Meir Simcha’s Refinement of Mishneh Torah
a. Acquisition via One’s Movable Property
b. Gerama and Garmei in Tort Law
c. Tosefet Ketubah When the Woman Petitions for Divorce
Conclusion
Chapter 3: Metahalakhic Principles in R. Meir Simcha Hakohen’s Oeuvre
1. Taking Human Nature into Account
a. Preventing the Salvation of the Entire Nation of Israel
b. Is an Individual Obligated to Risk Limb in order to Save Another’s Life?
c. The Reason Women Are Exempted from the Precept to Procreate
d. Should a Minor Exempt Her Co-Wives from Levirate Marriage?
e. Coercing Someone into Observing Religious Norms
f. We Do Not Force an Individual to Circumcise Himself
g. May One Who is not a High Priest Allow Himself to Become Ritually Impure?
2. Dealing Stringently with Changing or Deviating from Societal Norms
a. A Woman Who Calls Off an Engagement to Marry
b. Tortfeasor: Paying According to the Time of Damage
c. One Who Steals from a Thief
3. Are Intention or Action the Determining Factor?
a. Adjudicating the Laws of Sabbath
b. Adjudicating the Laws of the Four Species Based on the Action Taken
c. One Who Digs Pits, Ditches, and Caves for the Purpose of Idolatry
d. Conditions Pertaining to the Wedding Canopy and Betrothal
e. Providing a Post Facto Rationale When Action Was Already Taken
f. Do a Minor’s Actions Testify to His State of Mind?
g. Halitsah
Conclusion
Chapter 4: R. Meir Simcha and His Attitude toward Gentiles
Introduction
1. Religion and Commandments versus Commerce and Negotiation
a. Prohibition against Usury: No Agency for Gentiles
b. Execution Based on the Testimony of a Single Witness
c. Lien on the Body of a Jew and Lien on Assets Possessed by a Gentile
2. Rulings that May Bring Jews and Gentiles Closer
a. Giving Gifts to a Gentile and Teaching him Torah
b. A Gift Given by a Gentile
c. Increased Quantities by Gentiles
d. Gentile Kings
e. Applying the Law of Orlah to Trees Planted by Gentiles
f. A Gentile Writing a Torah Scroll
3. Distinction between the Laws of Gentiles and Jews
a. Robbing a Gentile and the Commandment to Restore to the Gentile
b. May One Who Contracted a Loan Collect from the Gentile’s Purchaser?
c. Which Commandments Are Bnei Noah Executed For?
4. The Halakhic Attitude toward Gentiles in Meshekh Hokhmah
a. Martyrdom (Dying to Sanctify God’s Name): Is a Ben Noah Allowed to Martyr Himself?
b. Relations between the Proselyte and His Biological Family
Conclusion