* "The Wisdom of the Talmud", by Ben Zion Bokser, [1951],
p. 168 p. 169
Notes
Introduction
1. \"Beer ha-Golah", ch. 7.
2. Vol. V, p. 773.
3. See A. B. Tager, "The Decay of Czarism. The Beiliss Trial, Based on Unpublished Materials in The Russian Archives", Philadelphia, 1935.
4. This work is available in the original Polish and in a German translation by Minna Safier, published in Vienna, 1937.
5. \"A Commentary on the Palestinian Talmud", N. Y. 1941, Vol. 1, pp. Xxxiii, Xliii.
The Talmud As Literature
1. Jebamot 90b; Moed Katan 9a. *
2. Yerushalmi Sanhedrin 4:2. **
3. Rosh ha-Shanah 25b.
4. Baba Mezia 59b.
5. Sanhedrin 27b.
6. Mishnah, Baba Mezia 9:13; Kiddushin 24a.
7. Mishnah, Shebiit 10:2, 3. Cf. Gittin 37b.
8. Makkot 4b; Sanhedrin 54b.
9. Yoma 85b; Mishnah, Berakot 9:5.
10. Genesis Rabbah 39:21; Sanhedrin 93b; Baba Batra 15a.
11. Sanhedrin 39a; Baba Kamma 38a.
12. Mekilta on Exodus 14:15, 18:12, 21:14; Sifre on Deut. 11:13. Cf. however the analysis of S. Zeitlin, "The Halaka: Introduction to Tannaitic Jurisprudence", "The Jewish Quarterly Review", Xxxiv, I, (July 1948), pp. 14-21.
13. Mishnah, Yoma 1:1, 2, and Yoma 18a; Mishnah Yoma 8:5 and Yoma 83a.
14. Mishnah, Yoma 8:7, and Yoma 85a, 85b.
15. Mishnah, Baba Mezia 2:4, and Yerushalmi Baba Mezia 2:5.
p. 170
The Forerunners Of The Talmud
1. Ezra 7:11, Psalm 9:2, 14, 19:2, 50:16.
2. Genesis 18:22 and Genesis Rabbah, "ad locum".
3. Abot 1:1, 2.
4. \"Perushim" is a passive construction of the verb "parosh", but Talmudic Hebrew frequently uses the passive form with an active meaning as in Mishnah, Berakot 4:5; Tosefta Berakot 2:6, 3:18; Ketubot 26a, 66b.
5. Abot 1:4, 1:6, 1:7.
6. \"Megillat Taanit" 4.
7. Josephus, "Antiquities" Xiii 10:6.
8. Josephus, "Antiquities" Xiii 10:5-6; Kiddushin 66a; Sanhedrin 19a.
9. Shabbat 31a.
10. Gittin 36b
11. Abot 1:10; Mishnah, Nedarim 3:4.
12. Yoma 39a.
13. Antiquities Xx 9:7.
14. Mishnah, Yoma 1:1.
15. Pesahim 57a.
16. Pesahim 57a; Yoma 35b.
17. \"Antiquities" Xx 8:8, 9:2.
18. Josephus, "Wars" II 8:1 and "Antiquities" Xviii 1:6.
25. Abot de Rabbi Nathan II ch. 21, p. 22b, ed. Shechter; Sanhedrin 91b; Taanit 11a; Mekilta on Exodus 19:2; "Judaism in the First Centuries of the Christian Era", Cambridge, 1927, I, p.324.
17. Mishnah, Berakot 1:1, 2, and cf. B. Z. Bokser, "Pharisaic Judaism in Transition", N. Y. 1935, pp. 97 f.
18. Baba Kamma 113a.
19. Tanhuma, Noah, section 10.
20. Ketubot 19a; Sanhedrin 74a.
21. Sanhedrin 106b.
22. Abodah Zarah 17a.
23. Berakot 34b.
24. Mishnah, Yoma 8:9.
25. Gittin 55a.
26. Mishnah, Keritot 3:10; Baba Kamma 41b; Mishnah, Sanhedrin 9:2; Ketubot 33a; Mishnah, Peah 1:1; Yerushalmi, Pesahim 4:3; Pesahim 50a, 53a, 53b, 54b, 55a; Baba Batra 93b; Sanhedrin 23a, 23b; Soferim 14:18; Yerushalmi Baba Mezia 7:1. Rabbi Eliezer also disagreed on the number of sin-offerings required. He demanded one for each act by which the Sabbath was violated. Cf. Bokser, "Pharisaic Judaism", pp. 129-144.
27. Niddah 61b.
p. 176
28. Tanhuma, Buber, Shemini, p. 30 and cf. also Genesis Rabbah 44:1.
29. Abodah Zarah 9a.
Human Wisdom In The Talmud
1. Berakot 55b, 56a; Sanhedrin 30a.
2. Yerushalmi, Terumot 8, end; Ecclesiastes Rabbah 1:38; Abot 4:1, 2; Yoma 86b; Sifre on Deut. 19:11; Abot de R. Nathan 2:2.
3. Erubin 65b; Kohelet Rabbah 1; Shabbat 32a.
4. Baba Batra 29a, 31a; Jebamot 117b; Shabbat 119a; Baba Batra 5a, 5b.
169:* The citation of sources does not always follow the consecutive order of the volumes, but corresponds to the order in which these sources were used.
169:** Quotations from the Palestinian Talmud are prefaced by the term Yerushalmi.
All other quotations are from the Babylonian Talmud.