RT Book T1 Rabbis and classical rhetoric: sophistic education and oratory in the Talmud and Midrash A1 Hidary, Richard LA English PP Cambridge PB Cambridge University Press YR 2018 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1015106560 AB Training in rhetoric - the art of persuasion - formed the basis of education in the Roman Empire. The classical intellectual world centered around the debate between philosophers, who boasted knowledge of objective reality, and sophists, who could debate both sides of any issue and who attracted large audiences and paying students. The roles of the Talmudic rabbis as public orators, teachers, and jurists, parallel that of Roman orators. Rabbinic literature adopted and adapted various aspects of the classical rhetorical tradition, as is demonstrated in the Talmudic penchant for arguing both sides of hypothetical cases, the midrashic hermeneutical methods, and the structure of synagogue sermons. At the same time, the rabbis also resisted the extreme epistemological relativism of rhetoric as is evident in their restraint on theoretical argumentation, their depiction of rabbinic and divine court procedure, and their commitment to the biblical prophetic tradition. Richard Hidary demonstrates how rabbis succeeded in navigating a novel path between platonic truth and rhetorical relativism. NO Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Jan 2018) CN BM496.6 SN 9781316822722 K1 Rabbinical literature : History and criticism. K1 Reasoning K1 Rhetoric, Ancient K1 Rabbinical literature : History and criticism K1 Rabbinical literature ; History and criticism DO 10.1017/9781316822722