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Haredi intellectual abilities

שו”תCategory: generalHaredi intellectual abilities
asked 2 years ago

I just read your column about the contribution of Haredim.
In your arguments, you claim that the Haredi person lacks certain logical abilities, such as systematic and orderly thinking. As a Haredi person who is relatively well-grounded in halakhic scholarship, I would like to know more precisely what part is missing?


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מיכי Staff answered 2 years ago
To answer fully requires thought and conceptualization, and there is no room for that here. Therefore, I will answer briefly. I think that what is missing there is mainly a definition of concepts and a priori thinking. Before starting the calculation, establish logical lines and a sharp definition of the concepts. In yeshivots, they usually start with calculation and skip these steps. Furthermore, when giving a theoretical lesson, they usually do not start with the basics and assumptions and lay out the picture, but rather start with a collection of questions and suggest solutions. I mentioned here in the past that when my son was thinking of leaving the Grodno Yeshiva in favor of the Gush, I spoke on the phone with a veteran yeshiva head who deals with “dropouts.” My son’s dropout bothered them more than a regular dropout because he did not really drop out but preferred a non-Haredi yeshiva, and this of course threatens them much more. In any case, that same Jew tells me on the phone that he heard wonderful things about Rabbi Lichtenstein, the yeshiva head in the Gush at the time, and when he saw his books and articles, it became clear to him that he was really basic. Every good kollel avrech says more brilliant things. I told him that he was talking like a little child. Rabbi Lichtenstein, unlike Haredi avrechims and yeshiva heads, starts from the basics and lays out the possibilities and a complete map of the issue, and all the questions that are raised in the general shiur in Haredi yeshivahs and in the articles of those avrechims he mentioned do not even arise. So it may sound less brilliant, but it is much more serious and professional. This is what is said about the rabbi in front of the Levitical House in Volozhin, as is well known. Even from conversations I have with Haredi yeshiva graduates, I see again and again that they lack the ability to think systematically. Some of them are really brilliant and can offer brilliant questions, excuses, and connections, but the systematicity is beyond them. When you try to define concepts, it sounds trivial to them and they don’t deal with it. But of course, this can ultimately be harmful. When you do the definition of concepts and the a priori connections correctly, a lot of blood, sweat, and tears in theoretical study are saved. All of this surprises me every time, since yeshiva study is precisely the type of study that was supposed to develop these abilities the most. It’s a question of habit, not intelligence, of course. Beyond that, I often notice that common sense is lacking. Just yesterday I got to talk about the Rabbi who writes that there is no dina demalkuta in the Land of Israel. And as we know, Haredim quote him over and over again, almost as a primary ideological basis for their doctrine. When you think about it, it’s only a little clear that this is impossible. And weren’t there kings in Israel? Didn’t they have authority? How did they rule? Therefore, we need to discuss what exactly the Rabbi means. But in the Haredi world, even scholars, quote him literally and don’t bother to apply a little common sense and see that it simply can’t be true. I also see problems in the ruling of halakhah. The analogies and comparisons are very superficial and do not delve into the depth of the matter. For example, when comparing courts in Syria to courts today, every child immediately declares that there is a big difference. In Syria, there were no experts, and therefore they needed to appoint lay judges. But here we have experts, and therefore we are not permitted to appoint lay judges. But this is nonsense that indicates a lack of common sense. Is it possible today to appoint experts to the courts? After all, the majority of the public will not accept them. The alternative is that there would not be an effective legal system for the entire population, and this is an intolerable situation. Now you will see that this was exactly the situation in Syria. If they had prohibited the appointment of lay judges (after all, whoever appoints a judge who is not decent is like planting a seed at the altar), the alternative would have been that there would be no legal system there. This is the reason why they allowed the appointment of lay judges. But this reason also exists with us today, even though we have experts. Therefore, there is definitely room for comparison between the law of courts in Syria and our courts. But superficial comparisons immediately run into the aforementioned argument that we have experts in. There is, of course, the division of the Chazo’a, where there was no alternative legal system but rather they judged according to their opinion in every case. Is there such an option today? Is it possible to have a country without law where the judges judge according to their opinion in every case? Again, a correct argument, but irrelevant. Okay, I wrote from afar. But I hope my meaning was made clear.

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התורה הקדושה replied 2 years ago

1. The kings in the Land of Israel had power because they ruled on behalf of the Torah, that is, the Torah gave them power, so if they do not behave according to the Torah (R.L.) then they simply do not have it.

2. In general, the Rabbi says what he said, any questions you have, you need to justify them, but what he wrote is what he wrote

3. And by the way, also Maran Gaon of the Geonim, the Holy of Holies, the Minister of the Torah and the Pillar of Teaching, the Reverend Rabbi, who did not study at all in a Haredi yeshiva style, also took such action

מיכי Staff replied 2 years ago

Are you quoting passages from the Cyrus Declaration or the Geneva Convention? Actually, it looks more like an excerpt from some pure view book. Definitely demonstrates my point about problems with systematic thinking. Just saying that the discussion here is about the R”n method and the scholarly way of thinking, and it is worth engaging in it or opening a new thread with statements about the greatness and sanctity of the vision.

י.ד. replied 2 years ago

I once heard an ultra-Orthodox educator on the radio who was responding to Benzi Gopstein and he was talking about how the state has the authority of a king and a queen, and I thought, "So why don't you guys enlist?" Suddenly, when you have to deal with the real reality, the state suddenly gains authority.

מיכי Staff replied 2 years ago

Now I have come across a very typical example. On the issue of redeeming captives and there is no redemption beyond their blood. When I approach this issue, I first ask myself what was before the regulation? Do we redeem them at any cost? Why? What is the source of this law? Then I go back to the source of the mitzvah to redeem captives (which is the most important mitzvah, as everyone quotes from the Shul, except that there is no such mitzvah). It turns out that there is very little treatment of this question, and it is mainly through incidental comments. For me, this would have opened the lesson.
And so with regard to a deed that repels, a deed that does not. We learn from the tzitzit. But what would we say without the study? That the deed is superior or not? And why? Then we can ask what the study has innovated. And why did we decide that the tzitzit is an example that should be generalized and determined that a deed always repels, and not an exception that teaches that in general the law is that the non-deed repels? What does the decision to see a source as a father of all Torah or an exception that teaches the opposite depend on? These are questions that scholars usually do not ask, and even if they do, it is done in passing. They do not begin their study with the fundamental questions. And I have not even talked about the need to define what is and is not (an executive or normative definition), which no one deals with. It is amazing that the most fundamental question in halakhah is not addressed at all. And so with countless issues and concepts. There is no systematic and orderly thinking from the foundation and the Tefahot and above.
Of course, methodological questions (like the one I raised about how to relate to a source) are not addressed at all. The meaning of the rules of halakhah, questions of halakhic authority, controversy, and so on and so forth. It is not for nothing that the roots of the Ramban are a dead mitzvah in the scholarly world. At most, they address a halakhic dispute between him and the Ramban that arises there, but never the principle presented there and its meaning.
To my astonishment, I discovered long ago that despite the sea of material accumulated over generations in halakhic and Talmudic scholarship, there is almost no halakhic issue for which I find a reasonable answer to the fundamental questions in the commentators. There is no issue where one can be satisfied with what has already been written. And it is not that I have an interesting innovation in this or that issue. There is no issue that does not. And it is not my genius or the stupidity of others. It is a question of research habits and methodology. What interests you and what do you ask. Do you start with defining concepts and fundamental principles, or do you jump straight to the difficulty of the extremes and the foundations of rabbinic law? Conceptual and a priori analysis renders much of this brilliance unnecessary.

מלכות replied 2 years ago

Have you ever thought about writing a column where you would express your opinion on how to study issues professionally and seriously while giving good examples?
I think it would really help many, especially me

מיכי Staff replied 2 years ago

This is not a column but a book. I thought about it, but I don't know if the effort is justified. I don't know how many people would use a book like this.

מיכי Staff replied 2 years ago

By the way, I don't really believe in books like this either. You just have to demonstrate and people will produce what they want. There are many examples in my lessons and in the columns here on the site.
As a rule, introductions are for experts, not beginners. But there is still value in introductions, of course.

היימישע עסין replied 2 years ago

Your Honor, a point regarding writing a book or some systematic material on how to study a subject through study:
Although a book of this type certainly cannot teach from scratch how to study, in my opinion it is nevertheless important even for people who do not yet know how to study. I studied in one of the best Seder yeshivahs (and the study there is the highlight), and I can say that the feeling about study among most people is very sour. It is not entirely clear what the goal is that they are supposed to reach, many of the students get angry in the morning seders and do not really understand the purpose of what they are doing and what the product that they are supposed to reach through study is, they have tools from various study tools but they do not have a method and order that bring them to some product that they understand what it is. This causes people to come out of the study frustrated, do not really see value in it, and quite quickly after the army they start to drift into halakha. Not to mention the fact that it is much more difficult for people to answer the question “Why is studying study important” if they do not even understand what it is. I personally dug into this topic of how one is supposed to study and tried to talk about it a lot with scholars, etc., and they didn't give me very good answers. I don't know if the solution to this is a thick book, but in general, I think there is a great thirst in yeshivahs to understand what a study is and how one is supposed to do it, and there is a great lack of systematicity in this subject.

EA replied 2 years ago

Do you think that in your lessons on the Shas from past years (for example, on Babek) you handle issues in this way?
From what I could taste, it doesn't seem like it, but rather looks like a regular lesson (of course in your style and how you present it) but I didn't see any treatment of methodological questions like what you described above, am I wrong? For example, in the lesson on this, which is enjoyable and there is no shortage, you go straight into the calculations of the issue, and don't necessarily provide a conceptual analysis of what is enjoyable, what is rooted, etc.

(Just pointing out that if you were to write such a book as the previous speaker suggested, I would be willing to contribute whatever is needed for it, and it would be the book I would take with me everywhere. In my opinion, it is very essential. Unless of course there is nothing that can replace the study itself and time and experience).

מיכי Staff replied 2 years ago

Indeed, I don't teach this way on all issues. But where the analysis changes the picture or is significantly useful for the study, I try to teach them this way.
For example, in the Golden Chapter lessons I gave just now, the first three lessons dealt with conceptual analysis and a conceptual framework.

שקט replied 2 years ago

This is how you study in the mercy seat.
They have never heard of the word ‘methadalagi’, but their lessons are exactly like that. Organized but dry. No fluff. Rabbi Mazuz wrote the book ”Darache Ha'Iyin” about his study method (and its introduction to the book Arim Nesi on Tractate Yevamot is a masterpiece in itself), and he recommends ”Darache HaGemara” by R” Kenpanton.

מוטי replied 2 years ago

Rabbi Michi, this whole discussion is a bit funny. As someone who studied in Haredi yeshivots (you) and is familiar with the academic issues, you understand that the Haredim do it well and the next generation of the academic elite will be among the Haredim, and almost certainly in two generations.
You can write about the external contribution that people like Rabbi Lichtenstein can make to learning, you can write about specific problems in learning, and you can also write about a thousand problems that the Haredim have.
But about Haredi yeshivot learning, it is good. And it is advancing with many new trends like Schreiber's, and the Haredim enjoy learning differently than yeshivot boys in national religions.
Don't you agree with that?

דורון replied 2 years ago

It's worth reading carefully what the question was at the beginning of the thread and what Miki answered.

מיכי Staff replied 2 years ago

Doron, can you enlighten us? Do you see any problem? An unanswered question?

דורון replied 2 years ago

In general, I consider myself a fairly small-minded person (a white lie?). However, I can perhaps say that I understand that you were asked about one thing and answered it well. The questioner, on the other hand, responded to something that seems unrelated to my kind of bigots.

To the point: From my limited experience with Haredim, your description of their intellectual world seems quite accurate to me. To me, it is a wonderful oddity for the gap between the enormous intellectual abilities in a field as difficult as halacha and higher-order thinking in which they simply do not stop failing.

אחיעזר ואחיסמך replied 2 years ago

If you read what Rabbi Doron wrote, you understand that he came to tease Rabbi Motti and be of help to you. But you turned a lover into an enemy.
Maybe there is a blessing in this, Haman and cursed in this. I don't know.
After all, I studied with Haredim and they didn't study the issue systematically there.

דורון replied 2 years ago

I suspect that the person responding to my comments is an ultra-Orthodox person himself. A wonderful illustration of Michi's response. I don't know Rabbi Motti.

פרענק replied 2 years ago

Rabbi Mazuz was mentioned here and it is really interesting if you are familiar with his method, the "Tunisian Inquiry"? Maybe when you sit down with Rabbi Amsalem, who is a prominent student of his.

מיכי Staff replied 2 years ago

I don't know my sins.

פרענק replied 2 years ago

As long as the candle is lit, it can be fixed. You will probably actually like the book with the style that is prevalent in Haredi yeshivahs and the abundance of examples of research errors by the greats of the first and last generations. Maybe you are the soul root of a Tunisian 🙂

מיכי Staff replied 1 year ago

I have now uploaded column 637, which deals with my study methods.

אברהם replied 1 year ago

I know of a Haredi scholarly school that was actually pleased with it. It is about R’ Chaim Men-Har and his students.
Thus, in the example you gave about doing something that is reprehensible and not doing something that is not true, and mixing it with tzitzit – when I studied this issue with him, he dealt a lot with all the questions you mentioned.

מיכי Staff replied 1 year ago

Interesting.

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