But the bottom line is already written, and arguments are only respected insofar as they provide support for it.
This seems to describe a lot of what I’ve heard about Jewish ‘scholarship’, mostly according to Eliezer. Also, their definition of what constitutes strong versus weak evidence, and what it’s evidence of, is very different from scientific evidence. I don’t deny that the Old Testament exists, or even that its content is evidence of something (it shows what the culture and thought was like back in the ancient Middle East), but I wouldn’t think of proving a scientific hypothesis by pulling out a Torah quote that supported it.
This seems to describe a lot of what I’ve heard about Jewish ‘scholarship’, mostly according to Eliezer. Also, their definition of what constitutes strong versus weak evidence, and what it’s evidence of, is very different from scientific evidence. I don’t deny that the Old Testament exists, or even that its content is evidence of something (it shows what the culture and thought was like back in the ancient Middle East), but I wouldn’t think of proving a scientific hypothesis by pulling out a Torah quote that supported it.