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Eric Brand's avatar

fascinating stuff. two questions. in the second story, the conclusion is inferred not obvious. the mother comes to rav yitzchak and asks her shaila. the commentary may conclude that there's significance that three of her sisters lost children to circumcision, but what if the second or third sister had come to rav yitzchak? would he have said no, wait and see?

in the third story, it is not parallel to the teaching of the second, which is that three instances are needed to prove a pattern. abaye is the third instance. so why does his decision need any justification at all? the story should be about the next rabbi who marries her (or doesn't)!

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