parsha bit: Ki Teitzei
Aug. 31st, 2006 09:18 amI find a few things interesting about this:
The lesson seems to be that we not only hold the lost item but, when that makes sense, increase its value. One could have reasonably argued that when the man showed up Chanina owed him a hen, but that's not what happened.
We sometimes hear stories of how someone abandoned what he was doing to search high and low for the owner of a lost item, and in fact the talmud has a lot to say about this -- that it is inconvenient to search for the owner doesn't excuse us from doing it anyway. In this story Chanina waits but doesn't search. It's possible that the rabbis go on to argue about how he didn't do enough (the talmud is big and contains many cross-references, so for all I know there's a discussion of this story in tractate sanhedrin or something), but in the discussion in this part of the talmud, Chanina is clearly considered to have done a good thing. (Those goats brought him other rewards before the man came to claim them.)
Chanina didn't just take the man's word for it; he asked for a sign. A man's word is important, but we needn't decline to ask for proof. That said, I wonder what kind of sign the man could have given, or how much proof it's appropriate to seek for a mere chicken. I commented to the rabbi this morning that I was curious about the sign, especially as the chicken was no longer there ("it had a little white spot below its beak..." or the like). He suggested that this might go to show Chanina's observance of details, that he could match a description of a long-gone hen. Another possibility occurred to me: any sign might have been good enough, and the point was to ask the man for something (on the theory that a cheat would demur rather than giving a sign that would turn out not to apply).
(no subject)
Date: 2006-09-01 12:02 am (UTC)PS - The world's laziest cats say "hi."
(no subject)
Date: 2006-09-01 02:23 am (UTC)I don't know if you have the world's laziest cats. You yourself have provided photographic evidence that they can, at least at some times, be ambulatory. Meet Baldur the Fairly Slow, who (slowly) computes the expected value before getting up to, say, chase a bug or jump on a lap. I've actually seen him stand in front of a couch with a willing human, size up the jump, and walk away. :-)
(no subject)
Date: 2006-09-01 03:11 am (UTC)