Yoma 85a ~ Brain Death

On today’s page of Talmud the rabbis continue their discussion of the circumstances under which the normal rules of Yom Kippur may be abrogated. What happens if a building collapses and there are victims buried in the rubble (a scenario we recognize only too well)? A search for the victims may be carried out but with some caveats, one of which is the topic of today’s post.

יומא פה, א

תָּנוּ רַבָּנַן: עַד הֵיכָן הוּא בּוֹדֵק? עַד חוֹטְמוֹ. וְיֵשׁ אוֹמְרִים: עַד לִבּוֹ

The Rabbis taught: If a person is buried under a collapsed building, until what point does one check to clarify whether the victim is still alive? [Until what point is he allowed to continue clearing the debris?] They said: One clears until the victim’s nose. If there is no sign of life, [i.e., if he is not breathing,] he is certainly dead. And some say: One clears until the victim’s heart [to check for a heartbeat]…

Flatline ECG.jpeg

These few lines are the basis of an extremely important area of Jewish law, for they are fundamental to the question of when, exactly, a person may be declared dead. This has implications not only for the burial and the process of mourning to begin, but also for any decision to be made regarding the post-mortem donation of life-saving organs. In this post we will get into the details of how Jewish law is determined by today’s page of Talmud. But to do so we first need to detour into the history of the definitions of death. Ready? Let’s go.

At the moment we have to define death as cessation of the heartbeat ... there may come a new definition—but that would have to be accepted by lawyers, medical examiners as well as the lay public....”
— Alderete JF, Jeri FR, Richardson Jr EP, Sament S, Schwab RS, Young RR. Irreversible coma: a clinical, electroencephalographic and neuropathological study. Trans Am Neurol Assoc 1968;93:16–20.

Part 1. A Brief History of Brain Death

Before the era of mechanical respirators that take over the work of breathing, the process of breathing and the heartbeat were inextricably linked. If a person could not breath for a few minutes, (perhaps because they had drowned) the heart would soon stop beating. This would end the flow of blood to the brain which would quickly cease to function. Since the brain stem controls breathing, the person would longer take any breaths. There could be no return to life, no more beating of the heart. The person was dead. No breathing and no heartbeat.

The problem began when we could start a stopped heart with electrical defibrillation, and provide oxygen to a body that would not breathe on its own by using a mechanical ventialator.

Body-enclosing box. One of the first known body-enclosing boxes; patented by Alfred Jones in 1864.

Body-enclosing box. One of the first known body-enclosing boxes; patented by Alfred Jones in 1864.

Mechanical ventilation has been around in some form or another since the late 19th century, when in 1867 Alfred Woillez built the first workable iron lung, which he called the “spirophore.” He proposed to place them along the River Seine to help drowning victims, but the machine was difficult to use since it prevented access to the patient. It was the polio pandemic of the 1950s that prompted the development of improved mechanical respirators, as many of the patients developed a transient but deadly paralysis of the muscles of respiration. If the work of breathing could be outsourced to a machine, these patients might be saved. As machines were perfected to do just that, the mortality rate of these polio victims dropped from 87% to 40%. But that was just the beginning. “Over the past 60 years,” wrote Arthur Slutsky in his 2015 paper on the history of mechanical ventilation “many technical aspects of ventilators have dramatically improved with respect to flow delivery, exhalation valves, use of microprocessors, improved triggering, better flow delivery, and the development of new modes of ventilation.”

Now the sequence of events we outlined a moment ago became upended. Remember, if a person could not breath for a few minutes the heart would soon stop beating. This would end the flow of blood to the brain which would quickly cease to function. Since the brain stem controls breathing, the person would longer take any breaths. But if the work of breathing could be artificially sustained before the heart stopped, there could indeed be a return to something resembling life, and the heart might continue to beat. Often however, the period of anoxia during which no oxygen flowed to the brain (usually no more than 5-10 minutes at most) would result in the brain as an organ dying. We now had a body with a spontaneously beating heart attached to a respirator that performed the work of breathing, but a brain that was dead. What then, is the status of the person? She looks like she is sleeping. Her heart is beating and the machine that is breathing for her is providing oxygen to the lungs from where it is distributed to the rest of the body. All of her organs bar one are working: her kidneys make urine, her pancreas makes insulin and her liver continues to scrub her blood. But her brain is dead. Is she technically, legally, ethically or meaningfully alive, or not?

In his excellent review of the history of brain death as death, the neurologist Michael A. De Georgia notes that the modern era of debate began in 1947 when, for the first time, a defibrillator was used to shock a heart back into life. “Suddenly, death was “reversible.”” Then the first mass- produced ventilator, the Bird Mark 7, was introduced in 1955, and now the work of breathing could be done by a machine, even if the brain that would ordinarily control breathing was itself dead. It was then that the transition from a heart focused to a brain focused definition of death began to take hold.

Around the same time the field of organ transplantation was also beginning. In 1954, Joseph Murray from the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, reported the first successful kidney transplant from one identical twin into another, and this was soon followed by the first liver transplant and the first lung transplant. But the donors were cadavers, the transplants soon failed and the recipients quickly died. Then everything changed when Christiaan Barnard carried out the world’s first successful human heart transplant in South Africa on December 3, 1967.

The Harvard Ad Hoc Committee

Meanwhile there was uneasiness around the care of what was called at the time the “hopelessly unconscious patient.” In January 1968 the Dean of the Harvard Medical School Robert Ebert formed an Ad Hoc Committee to formulate the new definition of death. The committee consisted of neurologists, a neurosurgeon and a nephrologist together with an attorney, a neuroscientist, a physiologist, a professor of public health, a historian, and an ethicist. It was difficult to find consensus because no-one was really sure how to tell if the brain was, well, dead. “Irreversible coma” was prognostic of death but not really equal to death, and anyway what was meant by irreversible, and how would that be measured? The Ad Hoc Committee came up with some suggestions.

First there was “unreceptivity and unresponsivity” which is the central feature of irreversible coma. Then there were “no movements or breathing” as the second criterion. Absent reflexes was the third. Finally, isoelectric (or flat line) EEG was the fourth criterion. The EEG measures electrical activity across the brain. A flat EEG means there is no such activity, and that the brain is dead. When patients met all the criteria, they would be considered essentially dead.

As Degorgia noted, the Harvard report did not really provide a fully worked out and conceptually coherent notion of what brain death was. Instead they said this: “Any organ, brain or other, that no longer functions and has the no possibility of functioning is for all practical purposes dead.” Some of the push was coming from transplant surgeons, who were horrified that organs from (brain) dead people were being wasted: “Can society afford to lose organs that are now being buried?... Patients are stacked up in every hospital in Boston and all over the world waiting for suitable donor kidneys. At the same time patients are being brought in dead to emergency wards and potentially useful kidneys are being discarded.” But to be clear, the concept of brain death was not created to benefit transplantation.

Parallel developments that converged in the formulation of the concept of brain death. From De Georgia M. A. History of brain death as death: 1968 to the present. Journal of Critical Care. 2014 29; 673–678.

Parallel developments that converged in the formulation of the concept of brain death. From De Georgia M. A. History of brain death as death: 1968 to the present. Journal of Critical Care. 2014 29; 673–678.


Normal EEG, measuring electrical activity in the brain. Each line is coming from a different electrode placed on the scalp.

Normal EEG, measuring electrical activity in the brain. Each line is coming from a different electrode placed on the scalp.

EEG in a brain dead person. The patient was a 23-year-old woman who had a massive intracerebral hemorrhage. She was  unresponsive to noxious and other stimuli and had absent brainstem reflexes, fixed dilated pupils, and apnea. Three hours after this recording, respiratory support was discontinued and she was pronounced dead. The little blips on the otherwise flat tracings are artifact from the heartbeat, which is shown in the bottom lead. From here.

EEG in a brain dead person. The patient was a 23-year-old woman who had a massive intracerebral hemorrhage. She was unresponsive to noxious and other stimuli and had absent brainstem reflexes, fixed dilated pupils, and apnea. Three hours after this recording, respiratory support was discontinued and she was pronounced dead. The little blips on the otherwise flat tracings are artifact from the heartbeat, which is shown in the bottom lead. From here.

Ever Since the Ad Hoc Commission

Since the 1968 publication of the findings of the Ad Hoc Commission, lots has happened. The World Medical Association weighed in. A 1976 Conference of the Medical Royal Colleges and their faculties in the United Kingdom also adopted brainstem death. In 1977 the National Institutes of Health attempted to validate the most commonly used criteria in the United States: coma, apnea, and a flat EEG in a multicenter study. In 1979, the President’s Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research was organized to bring clarity to brain death and other ethical issues that had emerged in the 1950s but were crystallized in the case of Karen Ann Quinlan, a young woman in a persistent vegetative state, which it cannot be emphasized enough is not the same as brain death. Not even close. In 1994, the American Academy of Neurology undertook the mission to finally standardize the neurological criteria and Practice Parameters were published the following year. The 3 cardinal findings in brain death were “coma or unresponsiveness, absence of brainstem reflexes, and apnea.” In 2010, they were updated again.

But throughout the 1990s, concerns and criticisms about the report from the President’s Commission persisted. The Commission’s main argument was that whole brain death equaled death because, afterwards, the body ceased to be an “integrated organism” and rapidly became a disintegrating collection of organs. However, by then it was clear that brain-dead patients did not necessarily “dis-integrate” as promised. And then there was the problem of language. Here is De Gerogia:

Brain death has always been problematic. This was recognized from the beginning. “Death is what we are talking about,” Joseph Murray argued, “and adding the adjective ‘brain’ implies some restriction on the term as if it were an incomplete type of death.” The term also implies death of “the brain,” that is, death of the cells and tissues constituting the brain rather than death of the human being. Some argued that even the single word death was inadequate.

When in doubt, establish a commission. So in 2007 another President’s Council on Bioethics was created to address some of these lingering concerns. Their white paper was appropriately called “Controversies in the Determination of Death.” It discarded the ambiguous term brain death, and replaced it with the philosophically neutral term total brain failure. It challenged the various conceptual arguments for brain death advanced over the years and suggested a novel argument that equated death with the “cessation of the fundamental vital work of a living organism—the work of self-preservation.” Total brain failure equals death because the “organism can no longer engage in the essential work that defines living things.”

And that’s basically where we are today. The concept of death evolved as a result of several parallel developments, transitioning from the traditional no breathing and no heartbeat (the cardiopulmonary definition) to a brain-based definition of death. And with that, we can pivot to how Judaism has dealt with all this.

Part 2. The Jewish Views on Brain Death

Although as we have seen, the Talmud itself deals with the question, it is most interesting to note that the modem debate on the definition of death began some two hundred years ago, when the issue became a divisive one within the Jewish community.

Moses Mendelssohn and The Fear of Being Buried Alive

In April 1772 the Duke of Mecklenburg in what is now Germany ordered that burials be postponed for three days in order to prevent burying those who were still alive. 'The edict encouraged the Jews of the duchy to seek the advice of the Jewish philosopher Moses Mendelssohn. Mendelssohn argued for the continued right of the Jewish community to exercise religious autonomy, and pointed out the prohibition against delaying burial. However, to lessen the possibility of burial alive, Mendelssohn suggested that the Jews obtain a medical certificate prior to burial. His pleas to the Duke were so successful that new regulations along the lines suggested by Mendelssohn replaced the original edict. However, in a letter to the leaders of the Jewish community, Mendelssohn expressed anger at what he considered an unwarranted reaction to the edict, and advised them to agree to it on the grounds that it was not in violation of any Torah principle, and was even to be recommended on medical grounds. Mendelssohn's position was later published anonymously in a local Jewish paper. Mendelssohn's position was criticized by his contemporary, the rabbi and scholar Ya'acov Emden, who the Jewish community had also approached for help. Despite this, many members of the Jewish community began to accept the edict, and refused to bury the dead on the day of their death.

The Chatam Sofer on Death

Some 60 years after the Duke's edict, Rabbi Moses Sofer, known as the Chatam Sofer, wrote "it seems to me, that in the countries under the Czar, many [Jews] delay burial out of respect for the head of state, and through this [the truth of] the matter has been forgotten to such an extent that people believe they arc following a Torah law." It is worth noting just how widespread had become the Jewish practice of following this state law. The Chatam Sofer went on to analyze the definition of death in Jewish law, rejected the work of Mendelssohn, and recommended that burial be dependent on the normal clinical criteria of the establishment of death, rather than on the Duke's criteria, which had ultimately depended on post-mortem changes as proof that death had indeed occurred.

At the time of the Chatam Sofer there was a real doubt over the expertise of the medical profession in determining that death had occurred, and yet the Chatam Sofer insisted that if the halakhic criteria had been fulfilled there was no need to worry about the rare instances when in fact the patient was shown to have been mistakenly certified as dead.

Clearly, Jewish Jaw and custom was affected by the wider medical practices of the day. We can now turn to the primary sources that deal with the Jewish definition of death, which are found on today’s page of Talmud.

In today’s daf we have the earliest and in many ways the most important of all the texts is the discussion of the criterion for determining death. The Talmud describes a terrible situation in which a collapsed building has buried victims. The situation is complicated by the fact that it is Shabbat; clearly normal Shabbat regulations are suspended for the sake of preserving human life. However, once it becomes clear that the individual is dead, no futher rescue work is allowed as normal Shabbat regulations once again take force. The question then hinges on how much of the buried body must be uncovered in order to discover if death has occurred. 

…תָּנוּ רַבָּנַן: עַד הֵיכָן הוּא בּוֹדֵק? עַד חוֹטְמוֹ. וְיֵשׁ אוֹמְרִים: עַד לִבּו… אַבָּא שָׁאוּל מוֹדֵי דְּעִיקַּר חַיּוּתָא בְּאַפֵּיהּ הוּא, דִּכְתִיב: ״כל אֲשֶׁר נִשְׁמַת רוּחַ חַיִּים בְּאַפָּיו״

How far must one search fin order to ascertain if the victim is dead or alive? Until [one uncovers] his nose. Some say up to his heart ... Abba Shaul agrees that life manifests itself primarily through the nose, as it is written "In whose nostrils was the breath of the spirit of life”

 So far it would seem that the dispute in the Talmud is simply one between the view that death is equated with the termination of respiration - the first opinion - and the belief that death is indicated by a failure to detect any heartbeat However, Rav Pappa, the Talmudic sage of the fourth century, explains the exact circumstances of the dispute, and his explanation changes the understanding of definition of death in Jewish law:

 

אָמַר רַב פָּפָּא: מַחְלוֹקֶת מִמַּטָּה לְמַעְלָה, אֲבָל מִמַּעְלָה לְמַטָּה, כֵּיוָן דִּבְדַק לֵיהּ עַד חוֹטְמוֹ — שׁוּב אֵינוֹ צָרִיךְ, דִּכְתִיב: ״כֹּל אֲשֶׁר נִשְׁמַת רוּחַ חַיִּים בְּאַפָּיו״.

Rav Pappa said: The dispute with regard to how far to check for signs of life applies when the digger begins removing the rubble from below, [starting with the feet, to above.] In such a case it is insufficient to check until his heart; rather, one must continue removing rubble until he is able to check his nose for breath. But if one cleared the rubble from above to below, once he checked as far as the victim’s nose he is not required to check further, as it is written: “All in whose nostrils was the breath of the spirit of life” (Genesis 7:22).

Thus if the face is uncovered first and there is no evidence of respiration, all agree conclusively that death has occurred. The respiratory criterion is accepted by Maimonides and by the Shulchan Arukh; neither requires examination of the heart, and it would seem that they provide an early source for supporting the brain death criterion as acceptable today. After all, there is no dispute that the heart of a brain dead victim is beating. The problem arises when one tries to qualify the significance of this cardiac activity.

Contemporary Interpretations

Among the contemporary Jewish scholars who have declared brain death to be indicative of death as determined in Jewish law are Rabbi Moses Tendler, Professor of Biology and Professor of Talmud at Yeshiva University in New York and Dr Fred Rosner, Professor of Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Director of the Department of Medicine at Queens Hospital Center, and the author of a number of books on Jewish Medical Ethics. In a joint paper, Tendler and Rosner argued that “ ... the complete and permanent absence of any brain related vital bodily function is recognized as death in Jewish law”  The beating of the heart is not a significant factor in Jewish law (halakha). Moreover, they claim that the fact that parts of the body may continue to move or twitch after death has long been recognized in Jewish sources as being of no consequence in showing that life is still present. The Mishnah rules that there are cases in which an animal may impart ritual impurity whilst it still shows movements after decapitation, even though an animal may only ritually defile after it is definitely dead. The Mishnah gives as an example the tail of a lizard, which once detached from the animal still moves. The tail is no longer alive, and hence the conclusion must be that movement of a limb - and this must include the beating heart - is not itself evidence of life. Rosner and Tendler also claim support from the Shulchan Arukh which has a chapter entitled מי הוא החשוב כמת אף על פי שעודנו חי - "He who is considered dead even though he is yet alive.” This title is itself good evidence that there is indeed a category of person who is legally dead, even though the body shows signs of life. Among those listed are an individual who has broken his neck, or a body “torn on the back like a fish.” The halakha considers these individuals to be legally dead even though they may make spasmodic movements, or indeed have a beating heart. The fact that the connection of the brain to the body has been severed is the reason that they are halakhically dead. Tendler summed up his position like this:

Complete destruction or the brain, which includes loss of all  integrative, regulatory, and other functions of the brain, can be considered physiological decapitation, and thus a determinant per se of death of the person.

Dr. Abraham Steinberg, writing in the Hebrew journal of medical halakha Assia also supported the position that brain death is an accepted criterion for death in Jewish law. He emphasized that cessation of respiration is the only accepted sign of death to be found in the early medieval sources and the classic codes of Jewish law. The seventeenth century scholar Rabbi Zevi Ashkenazi is the only halakhic source to suggest cessation of the heartbeat as the sign of death. He based his opinion on the belief that "respiration is from he heart and for its benefit. According to Ashkenazi, cessation or respiration is a sign of death because it indicates that the heart has ceased to function. However, Steinberg points out that this opinion is clearly based on a mistaken understanding of respiratory and cardiac function, and as such carries little halakhic weight. Similarly mistaken according to Steinberg, is the opinion of Rabbi Eliezer Waldenberg (1915-2006) who, in opposing brain death criteria, wrote that " ... examining the nostrils does not indicate that the brain has ceased to function, but rather that there is no longer cardiac activity.” But this is factually incorrect; lack of respiratory function (in the presence of the other necessary criteria) indicates that brain death has occurred and the heart may indeed continue to beat for several days afterwards, if the work of breathing is taken over by a mechanical respirator.  

Not all authorities accept that brain death is compatible with Jewish law. Indeed the brain death debate is an example of rabbinic authorities holding completely opposing opinions, based on the same texts and sources. Rabbi David Bleich, the noted American writer on Jewish medical ethics, has voiced strong opposition to those who accept brain death as halakhically valid. In 1989 he wrote that an analysis of the sources "indicate clearly that death occurs only upon cessation of both cardiac and respiratory functions." Rabbi Bleich opined that even according to the view accepted by Maimonides and the Shulchan Arukh that respiratory function is the determining factor in establishing death, absence of cardiac activity is a relevant factor. This position is based on an analysis of the commentary of Rashi, the twelfth century French scholar and renowned expositor of the Bible and Talmud. In explaining the reason for the need to check for respiratory efforts at the nostrils in the Talmudic text in today’s daf quoted earlier, Rashi wrote " ...sometimes life is not recognizable in the heart but it is evident at the nose." For Bleich, the words of Rashi would indicate that " …hypothetically if confronted by a situation in which "life" is not evident in the nose ... but is evident at the heart, cardiac activity would itself be sufficient to negate any other presumptive symptom of death."  In another paper Bleich explained that Rashi emphasizes the need to check the nostrils “…because inability to detect a heartbeat is inconclusive ... particularly in the case of a debilitated accident victim who may also be obese and [when] the examination is performed without the aid of a stethoscope." Further support for this position is Rashi's comment that the entire controversy in the Talmud is limited to the case in which the victim is "comparable to a corpse in that he does not move his limbs." Hence according to Bleich's interpretation of Rashi, “... the presence of any vital force (including a heartbeat] .. is, by definition, a conclusive indication that death has not occurred." This view is supported by Rabbi Zevi Ashkenazi, who noted that a weak heartbeat may not be perceptible, and yet the victim may still be alive. R. Moses Sofer, the leader of orthodox Jewry in the first part of the nineteenth century, similarly ruled that absence of respiration is conclusive only if the patient “…lies as an inanimate stone and there is no pulse whatsoever."

Rabbi Bleich is also unconvinced by the "physiological decapitation” argument of those who find brain death to be halakhically acceptable. Just as decapitation involves separation of the entire head from the body, so too "physiological decapitation" must be defined as physiological destruction of the entire brain. This phenomenon has never been observed. Moreover, he maintains that the halakha does not equate dysfunction of an organ with its excision. For example, an animal with “no liver” may not be eaten (though note, there is no such reality as an animal with “no liver”); but an animal in which there is a liver, however poor its function, is considered kosher. So too, the failure of the brain to function cannot be equated with its excision, and the patient with brain death is not analogous to a decapitated individual, in whom the heartbeat is most certainly not a sign of life. Moreover, it is still unclear what proportion of the brain is destroyed at the time brain death is diagnosed. As one physician wrote:

In the usual clinical context of brain death there is no certain way of ascertaining (other than by angiographic inference) that major areas of the brain such as the cerebellum, the basal ganglia, or the thalami have irreversibly ceased to function. A clinical diagnosis of "whole brain death" is in this sense a fiction. 

 Rabbi Bleich's criticisms of the brain death criteria were supported by Rabbi Ahron Soloveichik (d. 2001) who was Rosh Yeshivah of Brisk Yeshiva in Chicago, and a leading halakhic figure in the United States, who wrote that

“…according to the halakha total death [sic] is determined by termination of the three basic functions of life; namely respiration, cardiac activity and brain function ... .it is incumbent upon all those who have ethical sensitivity to protest against those who are trying to implement the Harvard criteria.”

Differences of Opinion

The entire debate is made even more perplexing by the different interpretations placed, not only on the Talmudic texts and commentaries, but on the responsa of the late Rabbi Moshe Feinstein. Ever since his death in 1986 his position as a halakhic figure has become of such importance that both those in favor of accepting brain death criteria and those who oppose it have made efforts to show that he would have supported their respective claims. The same responsa are used to demonstrate completely divergent opinions.

In 1976 Rabbi Feinstein wrote a responsa to Rabbi Tendler (who is also his son-in-law,) in which he explained that it was permissible to test for evidence of spontaneous respiration in a patient on a respirator, during the time the respirator is disconnected to allow the patient's airways to be suctioned (אגרות משה - יורה דעה חלק ג' סימן קלב). If no respiratory efforts are observed over a fifteen-minute period, the patient may be declared dead. Rabbi Feinstein added that radioisotope studies, used as a measure of brain blood flow, should be used to confirm brain death. Tendler and Rosner cite this responsa as evidence that Rabbi Feinstein supported the concept of physiological decapitation, and suggest that radioisotope studies are not obligatory but should be used if available. Steinberg also cites this responsa, and emphasized that nowhere does it mention cardiac cessation as a criteria of death, which would clearly support the brain death criteria. However, Bleich and Abraham both reject this interpretation as being highly incompatible with previous responsa of Rabbi Feinstein, and claim instead that blood flow studies are to be undertaken before certifying death, even in the absence of respiration. This responsa is believed by those opposed to the brain death criteria to show that respiratory criteria are not to be relied on, and that Jewish law is not compatible with such standards. A similar disagreement over the meaning of Rabbi Feinstein's analysis exists over at least two other responsa. 

Long ago, the Israeli Chief Rabbinate published its position on the acceptability of the brain death criteria following an inquiry made by the Israeli Ministry of Health regarding the initiation of a heart transplant program. Their findings, which permitted heart transplants at Jerusalem's Hadassah hospital, were based the determination of death as recommended by a committee of physicians at the hospital; the Chief Rabbinate accepted brain death as halakhic death, although it did require an additional confirmatory test of brain stem dysfunction.

when You need to decide….

The definition of death clearly is not a matter of even remote agreement among Jewish scholars. For them, determination of death need not necessarily be of practical importance. For the Jewish doctor, however, faced with the decision in the Intensive Care Unit as to whether or not a patient has died, and whether another may receive life-saving organs, the matter is of the utmost urgency. Perhaps all the doctor can be expected to do is to understand fully the debate, and know on whose opinion her actions are based. If the doctor chooses to declare the patient dead based on the brain death criteria accepted by the Conference of Medical Royal Colleges, then she has a number of leading halakhic authorities on which to rely. If however, the doctor feels uneasy about declaring the patient dead whilst there is still cardiac activity, and would rather wait a few days until spontaneous cessation of the heart she too has a halakhic basis on which to rely, though to be honest her medical colleagues may not agree. For the observant Jewish physician, the decision must ultimately be based on the doctor's careful understanding of the halakhic difficulties with both positions, together with Rabbinic guidance of the highest expertise.

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Yoma 85a ~ Talmudic Embryology

In a dispute about whether death is a cessation of breathing or a cessation of the heartbeat, the Talmud suggests that a parallel may be drawn to another dispute, this one concerning the growth of a human embryo:

יומא פה, א

נֵימָא הָנֵי תַּנָּאֵי כִּי הָנֵי תַּנָּאֵי. דְּתַנְיָא: מֵהֵיכָן הַוָּלָד נוֹצָר — מֵרֹאשׁוֹ, שֶׁנֶּאֱמַר: ״מִמְּעֵי אִמִּי אַתָּה גוֹזִי״, וְאוֹמֵר: ״גזִּי נִזְרֵךְ וְהַשְׁלִיכִי״. אַבָּא שָׁאוּל אוֹמֵר: מִטִּיבּוּרוֹ, וּמְשַׁלֵּחַ שָׁרָשָׁיו אֵילָךְ וְאֵילָךְ

Let us say that the dispute between these tanna’im who disagree about checking for signs of life is like the dispute between these tanna’im who disagree about the formation of the embryo. As it was taught in a baraita: From what point is the embryo created? It is from its head, as it is stated: “You are He Who took me [gozi] out of my mother’s womb” (Psalms 71:6), and it says: “Cut off [gozi] your hair, and cast it away” (Jeremiah 7:29). [These verses suggest that one is created from the head, the place of the hair.] Abba Shaul says: A person is created from his navel, and he sends his roots in every direction until he attains the image of a person.

So today we will discuss Talmudic embryology, and focus on the question of how, exactly, the growing embryo forms.

Let’s start with a passage found in the tractate Niddah, that beautifully describes the way a growing fetus lays within the womb.

נדה ל, ב

דרש רבי שמלאי למה הולד דומה במעי אמו לפנקס שמקופל ומונח ידיו על שתי צדעיו שתי אציליו על ב' ארכובותיו וב' עקביו על ב' עגבותיו וראשו מונח לו בין ברכיו ופיו סתום וטבורו פתוח ואוכל ממה שאמו אוכלת ושותה ממה שאמו שותה

Leonardo Da Vinci. Studies of the Fetus in the Womb. Drawn between 1510-1513.

R. Simlai delivered the following discourse: What does an embryo resemble when it is in the bowels of its mother? Folded writing tablets. Its hands rest on its two temples, its two elbows on its two legs and its two heels against its buttocks. Its head lies between its knees, its mouth is closed and its navel is open, and it eats what its mother eats and drinks what its mother drinks...

Talmudic embryology reflected the prevailing Greek theories of the times. But those theories developed without the benefit of microscopes and the other tools later available to scientists. Despite this, sometimes the rabbis of the Talmud were spot on with their embryology. The statement of Rav Simlai is a good example. (He lived in 3rd century CE, and is the rabbi who brought you the famous count of 613 commandments.) It is a perfect description of a growing fetus, written as if Rav Simlai was looking at Leonardo Da Vinci’s famous sketch. But his was not the only talmudic description of a how a fetus grows, so let’s look at some others.

Will the real Abba Shaul please stand up?

As we read on this page of Talmud, Abba Shaul declared that the fetus grows from its navel:

יומא פה,א

מהיכן הולד נוצר מראשו וכן הוא אומר ממעי אמי אתה גוזי ואומר גזי נזרך והשליכי וגו' אבא שאול אומר מטיבורו ומשלח שרשו אילך ואילך

From where is the embryo formed? From its head, as the verse says (Ps.71:6): "From my mother's womb you pulled me out (gozi)". And it says later (Jeremiah 7:29) "Pull out (gozi) your hair and throw it away.." Abba Shaul says that the fetus is created from its navel, and from there it sends out roots in all directions.

But elsewhere Abba Shaul has a different theory:

נדה כה, א

אבא שאול אומר תחלת ברייתו מראשו

Abba Shaul says: The beginning of the formation of the embryo is from its head

The contradiction between these two statements was noted by the great French medieval commentator Yakov ben Meir, known as Rabbenu Tam (d. 1174). He suggested that there is an error in the text before us: In Niddah, it should not read “from its head (מראשו), but “like a locust” (כרשון). Indeed this is the reading found in the important medieval dictionary Sefer HaAruch and echoed centuries later in Marcus Jastrow’s dictionary.

תוספות נדה כה,א, ד’ה תחלת ברייתו מראשו

תימה דבפ' בתרא דסוטה (דף מה:) קסבר אבא שאול תחלת ברייתו מטיבורו ומשלח שרשיו אילך ואילך ונראה לר"ת דגרס כרשון וכן פר"ח ובתוספתא פירש כעין חגב דסלעם מתרגמינן רשון וכן משמע דמיירי בשיעור האברים

Rabbenu Tam’s explanation makes a great deal of sense and leaves Abba Shaul with only one opinion: the fetus develops from the navel. This is not exactly what actually occurs, but to the naked eye it is not too far from it. Interestingly, Maimonides declined to take a position on the matter, and wrote simply that “at the beginning, the body of a person is the size of a lentil…”(תְּחִלַּת בְּרִיָּתוֹ שֶׁל אָדָם גּוּפוֹ כַּעֲדָשָׁה).

The Talmudic Sages,being true polyhistors, took into account experimental biology as well as popular beliefs.
— Kottek S. Embryology in talmudic and Midrashic Literature. Journal of the History of Biology 1981. 14 (2): 299-315.

Embryonic Development in Antiquity

In 1934 the British historian and embryologist Joseph Needham published A History of Embryology, in which he traced theories of embryonic development from from antiquity to modern times. In this fascinating book we learn that Hippocrates (c. 460-370 BCE) believed the fetus was formed by extracting breath from its mother, and that a series of small fires within the uterus gave rise to the bones and other organs of the embryo. According to Needham, Aristotle (384-322 BCE) understood that the role of the umbilicus was to nourish the fetus. The vessels of the umbilicus join onto the uterus like the root of a plant and through the cord the fetus receives its nourishment. Elsewhere, Aristotle claimed (contra Abba Shaul) that head of the fetus forms first. Galen (c. 129-216 CE) also used the analogy of the umbilicus serving like the root of a plant. According to him the embryo grew from menstrual blood, and then from the blood that nourished it through the umbilical cord.

What Actually Happens -not from THE head or from the navel

Development of the Umbilical cord. A: The posterior body wall is established. B: the vitelline duct form as the cells form a head and tail end, fold inwards on their lateral sides. C: The umbilical cord forms as the yolk sac and vitelline duct fuse. From O'Donnell K. Glick P, Caty M. Pediatric Umbilical Problems. Pediatric Clinics of North America. 1988 24 (1) 792.

At its earliest stage the embryo consists of a sheet of cells, an amniotic cavity and a yolk sac. The sheet of cells develops a head (cranial) and bottom (caudal) end, and grows around most of the yolk sac. This enclosed yolk sac then grows into the gut of the embryo.  The part of the yolk sac that is not surrounded by the embryo is still connected to it by a thin tube called the vitelline duct.  This duct then fuses with the contained yolk sac, and forms a larger bundle of vessels we call the umbilical cord. This occurs between the 4th-8th week of gestation (calculated from the first day of the last menstrual cycle).  

It is clear then, that the embryo does not grow from the head or from umbilical cord.  As you can see from the diagram, the head develops from the early cells of the embryo as it takes on a cranial-caudal polarity, sometime around 3-4 weeks gestation, when the embryo is about 3mm in length. Neither does the embryo grow from the umbilical cord, as Abba Shaul claimed. In fact it is the umbilical cord that grows out from the early embryo, and not the other way around.

However well understood the process of fetal development may now be, pregnancy remains a time that is often fraught with uncertainty and insecurity. The rabbis of the Talmud articulated these fears with a prayer, that reminds us of the fragility of human development and the relief when it all goes well.

ברכות ס,א

שלשה ימים הראשונים יבקש אדם רחמים שלא יסריח משלשה ועד ארבעים יבקש רחמים שיהא זכר מארבעים יום ועד שלשה חדשים יבקש רחמים שלא יהא סנדל משלשה חדשים ועד ששה יבקש רחמים שלא יהא נפל מששה ועד תשעה יבקש רחמים שיצא בשלום

During the first three days after intercourse, one should pray that the seed not putrefy, [that it will fertilize the egg and develop into a fetus].

From the third day until the fortieth, one should pray that it will be male.

From the fortieth day until three months, one should pray that it will not be deformed, in the shape of a flat fish,

From the third month until the sixth, one should pray that it will not be stillborn.

And from the sixth month until the ninth, one should pray that it will be emerge safely.

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Yoma 83-84 ~ Rabbis and Rabies

If an illness is life-threatening, the usual rules concerning Shabbat or Yom Tov (Jewish festivals) may be overridden. On this page of Talmud the rabbis discuss one of these conditions, the deadly disease we call rabies.

יומא פג, ב

ת"ר חמשה דברים נאמרו בכלב שוטה פיו פתוח ורירו נוטף ואזניו סרוחות וזנבו מונח על ירכותיו ומהלך בצידי דרכים וי"א אף נובח ואין קולו נשמע

The Sages taught in a baraita: Five signs were said about a mad dog: Its mouth is always open; and its saliva drips; and its ears are floppy and do not stand up; and its tail rests on its legs; and it walks on the edges of roads. And some say it also barks and its voice is not heard. 

Many of these features are certainly found in rabid dogs. They are not able to swallow and therefore drool; cranial nerve abnormalities may be the cause drooping ears. It will appear skittish, and because of the way its larynx is affected because it cannot swallow, it cannot bark properly. Thus “its voice is not heard.”

Rabid dogs in the Talmud

Elsewhere the Talmud allows a person to kill a mad dog on Shabbat, even though this is an act that is normally forbidden. The reason is that these dogs are likely to bite people and transmit deadly rabies.

שבת קכא, ב

חֲמִשָּׁה נֶהֱרָגִין בְּשַׁבָּת, וְאֵלּוּ הֵן: זְבוּב שֶׁבְּאֶרֶץ מִצְרַיִם, וְצִירְעָה שֶׁבְּנִינְוֵה, וְעַקְרָב שֶׁבְּחַדְיָיב, וְנָחָשׁ שֶׁבְּאֶרֶץ יִשְׂרָאֵל,  

Five creatures may be killed even on Shabbat, and they are: The poisonous fly that is in the land of Egypt, and the hornet that is in Ninveh, and the scorpion that is in Chadyab, and the snake that is in Israel, and a mad dog in any place.

The Cause of Rabies

ממאי הוי רב אמר נשים כשפניות משחקות בו ושמואל אמר רוח רעה שורה עליו

From where did the dog become mad? Rav said: Witches play with it and practice their magic on it, causing it to become mad. And Shmuel said: An evil spirit rests upon it.

Like all infectious diseases, the cause of rabies remained unknown until the germ theory of disease and much later the discovery of viruses. Hence the reasonable suggestion that it was caused by witchcraft or an evil spirit.

But rabies is not caused by witchcraft. It is caused by a virus from the family Rhabdoviridae called Lyssavirus. It is found on all continents except Antartica. (Australia has only a certain variant of rabies which you can read about here.) Because the virus is very fragile it cannot survive outside of its host, so you cannot get it from the environment. An animal has to bite you.

In his famous work History of Animals, Aristotle thought that rabies could not be transmitted from a rabid dog to a human.

Dogs suffer from three diseases; these are named rabies, dog-strangles, foot-ill. Of these, rabies produces madness, and when rabies develops in all animals that the dog has bitten, except man, it kills them; and this disease kills the dogs too. The strangles too destroys the dogs; and only few survive after the foot-ill. Rabies also attacks camels. But elephants are said to be immune to all ailments, but to be troubled by internal winds.

But Aristotle was wrong. Dogs can certainly transmit rabies to people. In fact, rabid dogs are the most common cause of transmission of rabies worldwide. But other mammals can also transmit this dreadful disease, as you can see below.

Global distribution of mammalian rabies reservoirs and vectors. From Charles E Rupprecht, Cathleen A Hanlon, and Thiravat Hemachudha. Rabies Re-examined. Lancet Infect Dis 2002; 2: 327–43

A Case of Rabies in the US

An estimated 59,000 people die worldwide each year from rabies. That’s about one person every nine minutes. In the US the disease is virtually unknown; only between one and three people per year get the disease. Here is a case report of a what happened in 2018 when a man caught rabies in Utah, courtesy of Morbidity and Mortality Reports, published by the Centers for Disease Control.

On October 17 and 18, 2018, a man aged 55 years who lived in Utah sought chiropractic treatment in Idaho for neck and arm pain thought to be caused by a recent work-related injury. On October 19, he was evaluated in the emergency department of hospital A for continued neck pain, nuchal muscle spasms, burning sensation in his right arm, and numbness in the palm of his right hand. He had no fever, chills, or other symptoms of infection. Dehydration was a concern because the patient reported he was unable to drink liquids because of severe pain and muscle spasms. The patient received a prescription for a steroid for muscle spasms and decreased sensation in the right arm and was discharged home.

Two days later, on October 20, the patient developed shortness of breath, tachypnea,{rapid breathing] and lightheadedness and reported he had not been able to sleep for 4 days; he was transported by ambulance to hospital B. The patient continued to have right upper extremity pain and severe esophageal spasms, causing him to refuse oral fluids. Because of his worsening symptoms and acute delirium, he was transferred to hospital C.

On October 21, the patient was intubated for airway protection {ie sedated and connected to a breathing machine]. His symptoms worsened, with fever to 104.7°F (40.4°C), and he became comatose on October 25. Additional exposure history collected from family members included ownership of two healthy dogs and a healthy horse, and a recent grouse-hunting trip where the patient had dressed and cleaned the birds while wearing gloves. High-dose corticosteroid treatment was initiated for presumed autoimmune encephalitis. Because of refractory seizures beginning on October 26, he was transferred to hospital D on October 28, where steroids were continued. On November 3, an infectious disease physician was consulted at hospital D who noted that the patient’s symptom of spasms when swallowing suggested a possible diagnosis of rabies. When specifically questioned about the patient’s exposure to wild animals, family members reported extensive contact with bats that had occupied the patient’s home in the weeks before illness onset… The patient continued to decline, supportive care was withdrawn, and he died on November 4, 19 days after symptom onset.

It took four hospitals over two weeks to diagnose the cause as rabies, because the disease is so very rare in the US that doctors naturally don’t consider it. By then there was nothing that could be done to save the patient. At post-mortem specimens were collected, which indicated that the virus identified was that of a rabies virus variant associated with Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis).

The treatment of rabies

Here is the Talmudic remedy for rabies.

יומא פד, א

דנכית ליה מיית מאי תקנתיה אמר אביי ניתי משכא דאפא דדיכרא וניכתוב עליה אנא פלניא בר פלניתא אמשכא דאפא דיכרא כתיבנא עלך כנתי כנתי קלירוס ואמרי לה קנדי קנדי קלורוס יה יה ה' צבאות אמן אמן סלה ונשלחינהו למאניה ולקברינהו בי קברי עד תריסר ירחי שתא ונפקינהו ונקלינהו בתנורא ונבדרינהו לקטמיה אפרשת דרכים והנך תריסר ירחי שתא כי שתי מיא לא לישתי אלא בגובתא דנחשא דילמא חזי בבואה דשידא וליסתכן כי הא דאבא בר מרתא הוא אבא בר מניומי עבדא ליה אימיה גובתא דדהבא 

One bitten by a mad dog will die. The Gemara asks: What is the remedy? Abaye said: Let him bring the skin of a male hyena and write on it: I, so-and-so, son of so-and-so, am writing this spell about you upon the skin of a male hyena: Kanti kanti kelirus. And some say he should write: Kandi kandi keloros. He then writes names of God, Yah, Yah, Lord of Hosts, amen amen Selah. And let him take off his clothes and bury them in a cemetery for twelve months of the year, after which he should take them out, and burn them in an oven, and scatter the ashes at a crossroads. And during those twelve months of the year, when his clothes are buried, when he drinks water, let him drink only from a copper tube and not from a spring, lest he see the image of the demon in the water and be endangered, like the case of Abba bar Marta, who is also called Abba bar Manyumi, whose mother made him a gold tube for this purpose.

Well, the first sentence is certainly correct: “One bitten by a mad dog will die.” In fact the Jerusalem Talmud (Berachot 8:5) states that you will never hear of a case in which a person was bitten by a mad dog and actually survived, presumably despite the use of male hyena skin.

However, today there is a remedy for a person who was bitten, so long as you get to it quickly. You can give the person rabies immunoglobulin which contains the antibodies to fight the virus. But you have to give it right away, and the patient needs a total of five shots over a month. Once the patient develops symptoms, as the man from Utah did, this intervention does not work, and the disease is uniformly fatal. In all of medical literature there is but a single case report from 2005 of a person who survived after developing the symptoms of rabies. The patient was a 15 year old girl who had been bitten by a bat that she was trying to remove from her room. The doctors thought that her chances of survival were negligible, and offered hospice care as one option and aggressive therapy with antivirals as another. They told the girl’s parents about “the probable failure of antiviral therapy and the unknown effect of the proposed therapy, as well as the possibility of severe disability if the patient were to survive.” Faced with this awful choice the parents requested aggressive care. The girl was in a coma for almost a month, but survived, although she was left with residual neurological problems.

Survival of this single patient does not change the overwhelming statistics on rabies, which has the highest case fatality ratio of any infectious disease. Any regimen may be ineffective in cases associated with extremes of age, massive traumatic inoculation, or delayed diagnosis and must be coupled with strategies to reduce the risk of complications from long-term treatment in the intensive care unit.
— Willoughby R.E et al. Survival after Treatment of Rabies with Induction of Coma. N Engl J Med 2005; 352:2508-2514.


The Mishnah in Yoma (8:6) suggests a controversial remedy for a person bitten by a rabid dog.

 מִי שֶׁנְּשָׁכוֹ כֶלֶב שׁוֹטֶה, אֵין מַאֲכִילִין אוֹתוֹ מֵחֲצַר כָּבֵד שֶׁלוֹ, וְרַבִּי מַתְיָא בֶן חָרָשׁ מַתִּיר

If one was bit by a mad dog, they do not feed him the lobe of its liver. But Rabbi Matia ben Harash permits it.

Before you email me with the idea that perhaps this would give the patient some antibodies, you should know that it would not. First, you are likely to get a mouthful of the rabies virus which may increase your exposure dose if you had any open sores or cuts allowing it to enter the bloodstream. Second, a rabid dog won’t have made some or perhaps any antibodies. That’s why it is rabid. And third, You need to get antibodies into the bloodstream. They will be broken down in the harsh environment of the stomach, rendering them useless.

In fact the Talmud Yerushalmi (Yoma 8:5) records that the German servant of Rabbi Yudin was bitten by a mad dog and was given the its liver to eat. But he died, leaving the Talmud to conclude for a second time that you will never hear of a case in which a person survived a dog bite from a rabid dog.

ירושלמי יומא 8:5

גרמני עבדיה דר' יודן נשייא נשכו כלב שוטה והאכילו מחצר כבד שלו ולא נתרפא מימיו אל יאמר לך אדם שנשכו כלב שוטה וחיה

In his commentary on the Mishnah, Maimonides, who was of course a physician himself, ruled that we do not accept the position of Rabbi Matia:

רמב׳ם פירוש המשניות יומא 8:6

ואין הלכה כרבי מתיא בן חרש בזה שהוא מתיר להאכיל לאדם הכבד של כלב שוטה כשנשך כי זה אינו מועיל אלא בדרך סגולה. וחכמים סוברים כי אין עוברין על המצות אלא ברפואה בלבד ר"ל בדברים המרפאין בטבע והוא דבר אמתי הוציאו הדעת והנסיון הקרוב לאמת. אבל להתרפאות בדברים שהם מרפאים בסגולתן אסור כי כוחם חלוש אינו מצד הדעת ונסיונו רחוק והיא טענה חלושה מן הטועה

We do not follow the opinion of Rabbi Matia ben Harash, who permitted feeding the liver of a rabid dog to a person who was bitten, because it does not help, and is only a protective charm (segula). The rabbis only permitted the commandments to be ignored when using real medicines, that is to say, things that have been tested and work, and shown to work with certainty through testing. But it is forbidden to use any kind of charm because they don’t have any power [lit. their power is weak] and experience is limited and this is a mistaken approach…

Although the rabbis of the Talmud suggested remedies for a bite from a mad (rabid) dog, none would work. And today, if you are bitten and show symptoms of rabies, we are basically in the same position, with no medical interventions that work. How humbling.

[Repost from Shabbat 121.]

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Yoma 74a ~ Gambling, Addiction and the Rabbi who Lost Everything

The Talmud teaches that only certain people may testify as witnesses. When they testify, they must take an “oath of testimony” where one is sworn to give testimony on something that he saw or knew. But this only applies those who are eligible to give testimony. Among those who are excluded are a king and a gambler.

יומא עד,א

שְׁבוּעַת הָעֵדוּת אֵינָהּ נוֹהֶגֶת אֶלָּא בִּרְאוּיִין לְהָעִיד. וְהָוֵינַן בַּהּ: לְמַעוֹטֵי מַאי? רַב פָּפָּא אָמַר: לְמַעוֹטֵי מֶלֶךְ.

רַב אַחָא בַּר יַעֲקֹב אָמַר: לְמַעוֹטֵי מְשַׂחֵק בְּקוּבְיָא. וְהָא מְשַׂחֵק בְּקוּבְיָא — מִדְּאוֹרָיְיתָא מִיחְזֵי חֲזֵי, וְרַבָּנַן הוּא דְּפַסְלוּהוּ,

dice.jpg

If one who is ineligible to testify swears an oath to give testimony, the oath is invalid even if he does not testify. And we discussed it: The statement: Those who are eligible to give testimony, comes to exclude what? After all, it was already said that the oath does not apply to women, relatives, and other disqualified people. Rav Pappa said: It comes to exclude a king. A king is not disqualified from giving testimony, but he does not testify before a court, due to the requirement to give respect to a king.

Rav Aha bar Ya’akov said: It comes to exclude a gambler [lit “one who plays with dice,”] whom the Sages disqualified from giving testimony. But surely one who plays with dice is eligible by Torah law to give testimony, and it is the Sages who disqualified him. Despite this, an oath of testimony does not apply to him by Torah law, even though the prohibition on his testifying is rabbinic.

According to Rashi, the gambler cannot be a legal witness because he is in the same category as a thief. Since no gambler places a bet knowing they will loose, any money that is lost is lost without the gambler’s true consent.(רשי: דהוי גזלן מדרבנן ופסול לעדות:) It is, in this way, stolen. And just as a thief cannot be a legal witness neither can a gambler.

Is gambling a disease?

“Compulsive gambling, also called gambling disorder,” says the Mayo Clinic’s Patient Information Website, “ is the uncontrollable urge to keep gambling despite the toll it takes on your life.” In the 2021 International Classification of Diseases (ICD), Pathological or Compulsive Gambling disorders are coded as F63.0, though they may also be coded as Z72.6 (a problem related to lifestyle). Excessive gambling was first officially recognized as a psychiatric disorder in the ninth edition of the International Classification of Diseases in 1977. Three years later it was included in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, third edition (DSM-III) which is used by the American Psychiatric Association. But why should gambling be classified as a disease rather than a fun night out at best, or a moral failing at worst?

As a group of specialists in addictive behavior pointed out, there are several features that are common to both drug addiction and gambling. They include similarities of reward processing which are distinct from impulse control disorders. In impulse control disorders, any “reward” is based on negative reinforcement: people have a feeling of relief after the act. In sharp contrast, substance-induced addictions and gambling offer positive reinforcement, (at least in the early stages of the disease process), when people report a “kick” or a state of “flow”. It is only later in the process that compulsive features and negative reinforcement predominate.

And then there is evidence that suggests “that individuals with gambling or substance use disorders exhibit a hypo-responsive reward circuitry. These results support the view that dopaminergic dysfunction constitutes a common feature of both substance-related and behavioral addictions.”

There is more evidence that dopamine dysfunction is involved in pathological gambling, and it comes from patients with Parkinson’s disease. When some patients are treated with medications that block dopamine in order to control the symptoms, there can be an unfortunate side effect: a sudden onset of gambling together with other reward-driven behaviors, including compulsive shopping and hypersexuality. Pathological gamblers also show “cognitive distortions” during gambling, that change how the gambler thinks about randomness, chance, and skill, and lead him or her to have an inappropriately high expectation of winning during the game.

Overview of possible disorder categories and central research findings in relation to for “Pathological Gambling.”  Abbreviations: IFC: inferior frontal cortex; PFC: prefrontal cortex. From Fauth-Bühler M, Mann K, Potenza MN. Pathological gambling: a review of the neurobiological evidence relevant for its classification as an addictive disorder. Addict Biol. 2017 Jul;22(4):885-897.

Overview of possible disorder categories and central research findings in relation to for “Pathological Gambling.”
Abbreviations: IFC: inferior frontal cortex; PFC: prefrontal cortex.

From Fauth-Bühler M, Mann K, Potenza MN. Pathological gambling: a review of the neurobiological evidence relevant for its classification as an addictive disorder. Addict Biol. 2017 Jul;22(4):885-897.

There is much more research to support the suggestion that pathological gambling is a brain disorder. If you need to recall one fact about the whole business, it is this: Compared with a matched control population, pathologic gamblers have more brain injuries, more fronto-temporo-limbic neuropsychological dysfunctions and more EEG abnormalities, which supports the hypothesis that addictive gambling may be a consequence of brain damage, especially of the frontal and limbic systems.

For most people, gambling is a relaxing activity with no negative consequences. However, others develop excessive behaviour: gambling becomes a disorder or an addiction that manifests itself as an irrepressible impulse to wager money. The activity has negative consequences and dominates the lives of those suffering from pathological gambling. Among other things, excessive gambling leads to the spending of ever-increasing sums of money and creates important personal, familial, occupational, and social problems
— Ladouceur R. Gambling: The Hidden Addiction. Can J Psychiatry 2004:49 (8). 501-503.

Leon de ModEna. Rabbi. teacher. Gambler.

Leon de Modina (1571–1648) was an important rabbi who lived in Italy. He wrote a number of works including Bet Lechem Yehuda, an ethical treatise Tzemach Tzedek, and a book that questioned the authenticity of the Zohar called Ari Nohem. He was also a pathological gambler, whose addiction caused him no end of misery. His autobiography has been published in English, and it is a fascinating and depressing read. In 1608 Leon wrote that as he gambled, “my behavior became so wild that I agreed to go and live away from Venice” (Cohen 105.) In 1620 things got even worse:

During the autumn of 5381 [1620] I also engaged in evil, losing everything by playing games of chance. As a result I was obliged to extend my term of burdensome employment…I am troubled and distressed with many debts…May God take pity on me. (Ibid 116.)

Not surprisingly his son Isaac also began to gamble, “and treading a bad path” (ibid 142.) For Isaac things continued to decline. Around the summer of 1638, Leon noted that his son “began to transgress greatly. Instead of earning money to provide food for his family, as a man should, from morning to evening he played games of chance, mad though they may be…He forsook his family, left his wife lonely, and went to Livorno and from there to Amsterdam…He could have lived peacefully and quietly in his home…But he vanished and has not been seen here …as he wanders about the earth” (idib 150).

Leon’s incessant gambling brought him continued financial hardship.

During the winter [of 1625] I lost so much money playing games of chance that I was compelled at Passover to take a loan of 152 ducats from the members of the Ashkenazic Torah Study Society…to be deducted six ducats a month from my salary, in order to pay my debts. I vowed not to play games of chance until the money was fully deducted, which would take twenty-five months. Today a year has gone by without income and without students and earnings. I do not know how…how I shall find some teaching, or whence will come my help. if not from God in heaven” (idid 129-130).

And so it continued. Mark Cohen, who translated and edited the autobiography, wrote that “Modena also pursued gambling for reasons other than financial gain; the stakes for which he played were enough to ruin him but not enough to raise his socioeconomic status in a significant way….At the gambling table he tried to make up for the deficiencies he felt in his position in his life and his abilities. Whether he won or lost, he could do it in a big way” (ibid 43). Leon was a classic case of ICD F63.0

In a thoughtful review of the consequences of pathological gambling, the psychiatrist Robert Ladouceur noted that “false beliefs of those who gamble can lead to chasing losses, changes in mood, withdrawal, deceitfulness, and important negative consequences. These changes at the individual level, coupled with the large financial loss, can be expected to affect the family life, employment, and social life of the gambler.” He could have been describing the arc of the life of Leon de Modena as well as that of Isaac his son. And at least in this respect, the findings of modern psychiatry support the rabbinic decision to disallow the legal testimony from a gambler, since the gambler is inherently unreliable.

Whence Free Will?

Still, the claim that the pathological gambler has a disease rather than a moral failing has many implications. Perhaps the most important of these is that with this understanding it makes as much sense for the gambler to repent for his lifestyle as it does for a patient with breast cancer to repent for her malignancy. In neither case is it the fault of the one with the illness. Elsewhere on Talmudology we have discussed how our understanding of the biochemical basis of our behaviors, whether based on genetics or trauma or neuropharmacology, is also challenging some of the traditional Jewish notions of free will and responsibility. The pathological gambler brings these questions into focus. Sin requires free will. And free will is rapidly becoming a troubled notion.

Let’s end with the most poetic, and most memorable criticism of the charge that our behavior lies outside of our control. It was penned by William Shakespeare in King Lear (Act I scene ii):

This is the excellent foppery of the world, that, when we are sick in fortune, often the surfeit of our own behaviour, we make guilty of our disasters the sun, the moon, and the stars; as if we were villains on necessity; fools by heavenly compulsion; knaves, thieves, and treachers by spherical pre-dominance; drunkards, liars, and adulterers by an enforc’d obedience of planetary influence; and all that we are evil in, by a divine thrusting on. An admirable evasion of whore-master man, to lay his goatish disposition to the charge of a star!

Psychiatric classifications have traditionally recognized a number of conditions as representing impulse control disorders. These have included pathological gambling, intermittent explosive disorder, kleptomania, pyromania, and trichotillomania.
— Grant J et al. Impulse control disorders and “behavioural addictions” in the ICD-11. World Psychiatry 2014. 13:2
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