There are multiple reasons on its face it wouldn't legally work, but even ignoring those I don't know the answer Eruv is notoriously complex
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Replying to @kilovh @eigenrobot
It's hard for me to imagine requiring a sphere, but even then, who knows what such a strange circumstance could demand (if it were otherwise viable)
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Replying to @kilovh @eigenrobot
If you could put funds toward colonizing a tidally-locked planet you could grant an eternal sabbath or never-sabbath or "travel to the sabbath" situation, perhaps
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Replying to @kilovh
This is incredibly cool Do rabbis spend a lot of time playing with ludicrous hypothetical questiona of the divine law? I would actually love to read Judeofuturistic works treating these issues
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Replying to @eigenrobot @kilovh
'Do rabbis spend a lot of time playing with ludicrous hypothetical questions of divine law' do Rabbis do anything else in their spare time?
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Replying to @orthonormalist @eigenrobot
Yes they do, ludicrous hypotheticals are rabbinic bread and butter. There are many books
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Replying to @kilovh @eigenrobot
Out of curiosity is there a book of 'best hypothetical arguments'?
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Trying to imagine a kind of Rube Goldberg machine of illusions running through like eighty stages each harmless except for the last one which deals Immense property damage
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Replying to @eigenrobot @orthonormalist
This Mishna is used as a fascinating demonstration for the non-illusory nature of the universe, something far less explicit in the Torah than the laws of cucumber gathering sorcerers
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