this post was submitted on 06 May 2024
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[โ€“] Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Jewish interpretation isn't that electricity is fire,

Unfortunately that was original the interpretation. It has since been amended into "building a circuit" and/or "doing work" as explanations. Of course neither of those hold up because turning on a water tap or turning a door knob aren't prohibited.

So there is no basis for following laws. It's only tradition and tradition can be however you define a word.

BBQ can be declared as not cooking by definition just like turning on a cold water faucet is declared as not work by definition.

[โ€“] ricecake@sh.itjust.works 2 points 4 months ago

I'll admit that I'm not entirely sure what point you're arguing anymore. If you think religious law is malleable through argument, then religious law changing after argument or discussion isn't a problem, it's just how it works.

Wouldn't you know, there's actual debate with citations about faucets and the circumstances In which they're permitted or not. It's not "all work" that's prohibited, but specific categories in certain circumstances. I'm neither a Rabbi, a scholar of talmudic law nor even Jewish so my understanding of the specifics are only about as deep as curiosity has taken me over the years. I don't think the specifics matter for this discussion.

Yes, there's nothing actually tangible about any law, religious or otherwise that compells people to follow it beyond cultural momentum. Words lack inherent meaning and it's only through shared convention that we agree on meaning or order in our society.