Authors: Bernard S. Jackson
ISBN-13: 9780198269311, ISBN-10: 0198269315
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Date Published: April 2006
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Bernard S. Jackson is Alliance Professor of Modern Jewish Studies, University of Manchester.
We think of law as rules whose words are binding, used by the courts in the adjudication of disputes. Bernard S. Jackson explains that early biblical law was significantly different, and that many of the laws in the Covenant Code in Exodus should be viewed as "'wisdom-laws." By this term, he means "self-executing" rules, the provisions of which permit their application without recourse to the law-courts or similar institutions. They thus conform to two tenets of the "wisdom tradition": that judicial dispute should be avoided, and that the law is a type of teaching, or "wisdom".
I. Introduction
1. Models
2. Law and Wisdom
II. The Mishpatim
3. Slavery
4. Homicide
5. Assault
6. The Pregnant Woman Victim
7. Maltreatment of Slaves
8. The Goring Ox
9. Theft
10. Agricultural Delicts
11. 'Bailment'
12. Seduction
III. Conclusions
13. Towards an Institutional History of the Mishpatim
14. Towards a Literary History of the Mishpatim