- Brisker method
The Brisker method, or Brisker derech, is an approach to
Talmud study innovated by RabbiChaim Soloveitchik of Brisk. It has since become popular and spread toyeshivas around the world. The Brisker method is also known as the "conceptual" approach to Talmud study, and is often referred to simply as "lomdus" (lit. "analytical study").Theory
Broadly speaking, before the Brisker method, Talmudic texts were taken at "face value" unless there was a compelling reason not to. If a contradiction between two texts was discovered, then it became necessary to reinterpret one or both texts in order to reconcile them. But there was no standard method by which to perform this reconciliation. Any explanation which once offered, seemed most reasonable, would be accepted.
The Brisker method replaces this approach with a methodical search for precise definitions of each concept involved in the discussion. Once the mechanism by which a law works is rigidly and correctly defined, it can become clear that one aspect of the definition applies in one situation but not another. Therefore, the final halacha will differ in the two situations, even if they superficially appear to be very similar.
Often an entire series of disagreements among the "
Rishonim " (Talmudic commentaries from roughly the period 1000-1500) may stem back to a subtle difference in how these Rishonim understand a line from the Talmud. The Brisker method can provide a precise formulation of how each Rishon understood the topic, and thus account for their differences in opinion. This approach is most spectacular when a whole series of debates between two Rishonim can be shown to revolve around a single "chakira", or difference in the understanding of a Talmudic concept.It should be emphasized that the Brisker method is by no means a total break from the past. Rabbis before Brisk sometimes made "conceptual" distinctions, and Brisker rabbis can still resolve issues without recourse to the terminology they invented. The difference is one of focus and degree. Non-Brisk analysis tends to formula "conceptual" definitions only when necessary, while for Briskers, these definitions are the first and most common tool to be used when approaching a Talmudic issue.
One example of Rabbi Chaim's emphasis on the value of precise definition can be found in quote: "One approach which answers three different problems is better than three different approaches to individually solve the three problems" (a corollary of
Occam's razor ).Examples
* "Cheftza/gavra" ("object/person") refers to distinctions made between a person and his/her actions (or the actions done upon him/her). For example, the Brisker Rav states (Yevamoth 2a) that a forbidden incestual relative is considered a "forbidden person," while though a menstruating woman is not a "forbidden person," the sexual "act" performed with her is forbidden.
* "Siman/sibah" ("effect/cause"): Does A cause B, or is A a result of the presence of B? For example, an adhesion on the lung makes a slaughtered animal non-"
glatt kosher ", but theShulchan Aruch and the Rama disagree whether it makes the animal non-kosher altogether. [http://www.kashrut.com/articles/glatt/] This disagreement appears to be based on the question: Does the adhesion cause non-kosher-ness? Or does it potentially result from non-kosher-ness, but also potentially result from a situation in which the animal remains kosher? The Shulchan Aruch holds the former; the Rama holds the latter, in which case an animal with adhesions can be checked and subsequently found to be kosher.* A Talmudic law can be shown to consist of two or more distinct components. Then, one component can be shown not to apply in a certain case, thus resolving a contradiction between the halachic rules in two situations.
* Active vs. passive: There may be a distinction between a specified exemption in the
halakha , and a scenario where the halakha simply fails to obligate someone.* "Tzvei dinim" ("two laws") is used to answer apparent contradictions, by regarding the two conflicting rulings as talking about two different cases and explaining differences in the decisions in terms of differences in the cases. An example of this is Rabbi Chaim Brisker's interpretation of (Bava Kama 88a) that there is one law for a man to circumcise his son and another that obligates the son himself to be circumcised. The two overlapping, but distinct, obligations can together explain a set of outcomes which could not be explained by a single logical principle.
As an extreme example, Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik observed that that the
Talmud discusses theSheva Brachot celebrations in the week following a Jewishwedding . The Talmud requires "panim chadashos" (meaning "a new presence" or "new faces"), i.e. a guest must be present at the Sheva Brachot celebration who had not attended the wedding. Elsewhere, the Talmud comments that once sacrificial meat has been burned to ashes, the ashes no longer have a sacrificial status, as "panim chadashos ba'u l'chan" -- "a new presence has arrived", meaning that the ashes are not the same as the meat. "So if you were at a Sheva Brachot party, and you looked around and everyone there had already been at this couple's wedding, why not just take some meat and burn it to ashes?", challenged Rabbi Chaim. Clearly, the phrase "panim chadashos" has different meanings in the contexts of wedding celebrations and sacrificial meat.* "Is the principle stated here merely an application of a general rule, or is it a different and unique principle, specialized to our context?" This distinction is demonstrated in a story involving Rabbi
Yitzchak Zev Soloveitchik and witnessed by RabbiYehezkel Abramsky . A person died, followed shortly thereafter by another, wealthier person. TheChevra Kadisha (Jewish burial society), rather than follow thefirst-come, first-served policy mandated byJewish ethics , buried the rich person first. A relative of the poorer person came to demand an apology from theChevra Kadisha . RabbiYitzchak Zev Soloveitchik consulted the Laws of Mourning fromRambam 'Mishneh Torah for just a moment before telling the relative: "TheChevra Kadisha were wrong, but that is between them and G-d. I will inform them that their conduct was improper, but you are not involved here." After the fellow left, Rabbi Soloveitchik explained to his colleague, Rabbi Abramsky, that the question at hand was this: certainly Judaism has a general principle offirst-come, first-served , because of the rule that when faced with the opportunity to do amitzvah , one should not pass it up. If this is the only reason thatfirst-come, first-served applies in the case of burials, then one who violates it is no more in the wrong than one who has passed over any mitzva opportunity, and his/her offense is between himself/herself and G-d. Or, instead, there may be a specialized notion offirst-come, first-served when it comes to burials, to avoid offending the bereaved. Only according to the latter reasoning would an apology be required. Rabbi Soloveitchik found thatMaimonides made no explicit mention offirst-come, first-served in his Laws of Mourning, and thus extrapolated that only the generalized notion offirst-come, first-served applies to burial. Therefore, the bereaved could not demand an apology. Upon hearing this reasoning, Rabbi Abramsky exclaimed (in a positive way), "Rabbi Soloveitchik can deduce laws from the fact thatMaimonides says nothing at all!"History
The famed
yeshiva ofVolozhin , arguably the first modern yeshiva, favored a traditionalist approach towards Talmudics under the leadership of theNetziv , which often required absorbing a great amount of Talmudic material to acquire a "general Talmudic feel" before analyzing a topic. Later, however, Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik became a lecturer atVolozhin . At this point, around the year 1880, Rabbi Chaim's new methods first became public.However, as Rabbi
Joseph Soloveitchik suggested in his eulogy for the Brisker Rov, the full, true "Brisk approach" as we know it today was not developed until Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik had beenrabbi ofBrisk for many years. The notes that Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik used for his lectures at theyeshiva ofVolozhin (years before he assumed the Briskpulpit ) are still extant today, and the approach found there is not as well-developed as in (his and others') later published works. The notes could best be described as "proto-Brisk lomdus", a term which could be used regarding the works of the "Beis HaLevi" as well. Several modern scholars agree with this notion of "proto-Brisk", and it can be heard in the lectures of Rabbi Dr.Aaron Rakefet-Rothkoff . Nonetheless, as seen above, even "proto-Brisk" was already different enough and popular enough to cause significant tension at theVolozhin yeshiva .An additional major influence on the "Brisk approach" was a Rabbi
Mendel Epstein ofSlutzk . Rabbi Chaim "Brisker" Soloveitchik spent several early teenage years inSlutzk , where Rabbi Epstein served as hismelamed (Judaics teacher for pre-college levels). Rabbi Chaim later claimed that much of the "Brisker derech" attributed to him was founded on Rabbi Epstein's approach; however, as a small town'smelamed , Rabbi Epstein and his ideas never achieved fame. Thus, Rabbi Mendel Epstein's contribution to the "Brisker approach" might be compared to that of SirIsaac Barrow ,Isaac Newton 's mentor, to calculus.The Brisker method has a certain parallel in the Dor Revi'i (commentary on Hullin) of Rabbi
Moshe Shmuel Glasner . Many scholars had been perplexed by theRambam 's rulings, as they had been used to understanding the Talmud according to the Franco-German school ofRashi andTosafot , as opposed to the Babylonian Geonic school followed by Rambam. Rabbi Glasner insisted that Rambam's interpretations follow perfectly from the Talmud once he is interpreted on his own terms. Rabbi Glasner's methods coincided remarkably with those Rabbi Haim; Rabbi Glasner's methods caused a sensation in the Lithuanian yeshivot in the late 1920s and early 1930s yeshivot, producing astonishment that a Hungarian rabbi had independently formulated a method so similar to Rabbi Haim's.Controversy
When it first appeared, some scholars denounced the Brisk approach as "chemistry", as it sought to analyze each Talmudic law by breaking it down into components, whereas a traditionalist approach focused more on the entirety of the laws.
While the Brisker method has won acceptance in almost all yeshivas today, it has its opponents. These include Rabbi
Avraham Yishayahu Karelitz (1878 -1953 ) (known as the "Chazon Ish"), who felt that often the existing approach to a Talmudic portion was sufficient. Additionally, the Brisker method is not widely used in modern yeshivas which stem from the Mirrer Yeshiva (originally fromRussia ), which instead tend to stress single, unifying themes throughout Talmudic concepts, often focusing on only one "Rishon" if it is seen as the most "truthful" approach to a Talmudic passage. "Mir-style" yeshivas are thus seen generally as opposed to "Brisk-style" yeshivas, though there is very little personal animosity.In Brisker yeshivas, the tractates studied deviate from the tractates popular in most yeshivas. Most yeshivas learn the Talmudic laws of money, property, marriage, and divorce. In Brisk, there is a greater tendency toward
Kodashim tractates, as well asNazir andSotah (more ritually oriented) tractates inNashim . Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik is noted for a tendency to study tractates in Seder Moed, a tendency formalized by Yeshiva University's decision to learn a tractate from Seder Moed every four years.References
Works by the Brisker school
* Hiddushei Rabbenu Chaim Halevi al haRambam - by Rabbi
Chaim Soloveitchik
* Hiddushei haGra"ch al haShas ("stencil" edition) - by same
* Hiddushei haGri"z al haShas - by RabbiYitzchak Zev Soloveitchik
* Hiddushei Maran Ri"z Halevi al haRambam - by same
* Hiddushei Maran Ri"z Halevi al haTorah - by same
* Shiurei haRav Aharon Lichtenstein (multiple volumes) - by RabbiAharon Lichtenstein
* Birkat Shmuel - by R' Baruch Ber from Kamenitzecondary sources
*Solomon, Norman. "The Analytic Movement: Hayyim Soloveitchik and His Circle". Atlanta, Ga.: Scholars Press, 1993.
External links
*cite web |url=http://www.yutorah.org/_shiurim/%2FTU9%5FLichtenstein%2Epdf |title=What Hath Brisk Wrought?|accessdate=2008-01-08
*cite web |url=http://media.www.yucommentator.com/media/storage/paper652/news/2007/11/05/KolHamevaser/The-Gra.And.Reb.Chaim.Forgotten.History-3079276.shtml |title=The Gra and Reb Chaim: Forgotten History|accessdate=2007-12-28
*cite web |url=http://joshyuter.com/archives/2003/12/structuralism_and_brisk.php |title=Structuralism and Brisk |accessdate=2007-12-28
*cite web |url=http://www.myjewishlearning.com/texts/talmud/What_is_Talmud/StudyingTalmud4460/Brisker.htm |title=The Methodology of Brisk|accessdate=2007-12-28
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