Subject: In a very quick response...
Author:
Posted on: 2021-01-15 10:11:04 UTC

...I can tell you that with the Talmud, at least, people were taught to recite it and it was arranged in such a way that there were...context clues, essentially. Pieces that would connect one set of thoughts to another to make it easier to remember. Or at least, that's what I was told in school; I couldn't give you an example off the top of my head.

Also: it is extremely likely that many, many groups of scholars have sat down to discuss and argue the symbolism of not only 3761 but many other numbers. On an amusing tangent, the Talmud has a tendency to record different rabbis' opinions on a topic as though they might have been in conversation with each other; this despite the fact that said conversation was frequently happening over several hundred years! There's also (related) amusing phrasing in the original Aramaic that turns what's probably intended as "Rabbi X responded vehemently" into "Rabbi X came and attacked him, saying _____!" I think that's mostly used with contemporaries, but if I'm wrong, then that is delightful. Just imagine: Rabbi W gives his opinion in the year 400 CE. In 550 CE, along comes Rabbi X and attacks his opinion, and it's recorded as though they were sitting at the same table!

Apart from that: the rest is fascinating, and your snark has and continues to amuse me. (Also: writing 26 takes two pen strokes, what are you talking about :P)

~Z

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