
Slaves, fetuses, and animals: race and ethical rhetoric by: Hart, William David 1957- Published: (2014) Glied in einer Kette by: Schneider-Cimbal, Hiltrud 1956- Published: (2020) November by: Schächtele, Traugott 1957- Published: (2021) Glieder einer Kirche: fünf Jahre Kommission der Orthodoxen Kirche in Deutschland by: Longin, Klin, Erzbischof 1946-2014 Published: (1999) Glieder an einem Leib: die Freikirchen in Selbstdarstellungen Published: (1975) The embryo and the fetus: new moral contexts by: Cahill, Lisa Sowle 1948- Published: (1993) Imagining the fetus: the unborn in myth, religion, and culture Published: (2009) Schrodinger's fetus by: Wilkinson, Dominic Published: (2017) The road to Ubar: finding the Atlantis of the sands by: Clapp, Nicholas 1936- Published: (1998) On the other hand, the discussion is not monolithic, but seems as if it is at war with itself: The brain-teaser in the end deconstructs itself through a contradiction. Thus, on the one hand, the text has a purely intellectual aim and what it teaches about women is not a historical insight, but rather that the rabbis instrumentalized the woman and her fetus for the sake of constructing a brain-teaser. Whether the ignorance of her perspective can be upheld is questioned by the rabbis themselves: their discussion ends with a contradiction, which is constructed on purpose. The participants in this discussion systematically ignore her perspective and read her case as a teaching, the function of which is solely pedagogic: it demonstrates the clash of two contradicting halakhic principles. Contrary to commonly held opinion in scholarly literature, this article argues that the talmudic discussion, which revolves around this mishnah, is not motivated by an attempt to treat the condemned woman with mercy. The mishnah Arakhin 1.4 accordingly rules that, if a pregnant woman is sentenced to death, one executes the punishment immediately and does not wait until the child is born.

According to rabbinic literature, the verses Exodus 21:22-24 entail a distinction between the legal status of a fetus and that of a pregnant woman.
