Taking Precedent Seriously 65
107. 108.
109.
110.
Ww NN
9.
22,
23.
24,
See the sources in note 97.
For a list of some of the works that contain these rules, see Elon, Jewish Law, 1540-1555. No value judgment is implied here. The establishment of some sort of regimen for determining the“correct” decision on a disputed matter may very well be a social or political necessity in a legal community; see Y. Kahana, Mechkarim besifrut hateshuvot, 1-8. My point is simply that this is one of the ways that a consensus view emerges out of a previously open debate over the“right” answer.
On the formation of this consensus see Mark Washofsky,“Abortion and the Halakhic Conversation,” in Walter Jacob and Moshe Zemer , eds., The Fetus and Fertility in Jewish Law(Pittsburgh and Tel Aviv : The Freehof Institute of Progressive Halakhah, 1995), 39-89, especially at notes 1-9. See also the forthcoming doctoral dissertation of Daniel Schiff for a comprehensive analysis of the history of the abortion controversy in Jewish law.
For background see Avraham Freimann, Seder kiddushin venisu’in(Jerusalem : Mosad Harav Kook, 1964); Y. Z. Kahana, Sefer ha*agunot(Jerusalem : Mosad Harav Kook, 1954); and Mark Washofsky,“The Recalcitrant Husband,” Jewish Law Annual 4(1981), 144-166.
1966).
. Menachem M. Kasher ,“Be inyan tenai benisu’in,” Noam 12(1969), 338-353. . The rabbinical reactions to that ill-fated proposal are collected in Ein tenai
benisu’in(Vilna, 1930).
. Shlomo Riskin , Women and Jewish Divorce(Hoboken : Ktav, 1989).
. BT Ketubot 63a-b; Rashi, Ketubot 63b, s.v. la kayafinan lah; Yad, Ishut 14:8.
. See Tosafot, BT Ketubot 63b, s.v. aval.
. See Beit Yosef, EHE 77, fol. 115b-116a, and SA EHE 77:2.
.See the review of Riskin ’s book by Gedalia Dov Schwartz in Tradition 25:2
(1990), 94-96.
On the other hand, some authorities are willing to consider the argument of ma’is alay as one of several factors—though not the exclusive factor—in persuading a rabbinical court to accept a divorce document of questionable validity. See R. Ezra Basri,“Get Me useh,” Shenaton hamishpat ha’iori 16-17 (1990-1991), 535-553.
Reuven P. Bulka, Dimensions of Orthodox Judaism(New York : Ktav, 1983), at 334-336.
Yosef Dov Soloveitchik , Shi‘urim lezekher abba mari z”1(Jerusalem : Akiva Yosef , 1983), at 428.
See Walter S. Wurzburger ,“The Conservative View of Halakhah is Non-Traditional,” Judaism 38(1989), 377-379.
We should not claim too much for the responsum in this regard. The teshuvah does not necessarily render a chronological account of its author’s thought processes. For example, although the responsum usually presents the question, followed by the halakhic argumentation that leads to its answer, it may well be that the meshiv arrived at his answer prior to his considering those