Abstract
The two Talmuds one from Jerusalem, the other from Babylonia are the very foundation of rabbinic Judaism. Composed between the third and eighth centuries CE, they took a biblical faith whose central sanctuary, the Second Temple, lay in ruins and turned it into a civilization driven by law, learning, and community. This article follows the rise of the Oral Torah, the literary design of the Mishnah and Gemara, the interpretive rules that power talmudic reasoning, and the philosophical tensions running through the Talmud’s legal and narrative strands (Halakha and Aggadah). The argument here is that talmudic philosophy is not a formal metaphysical system but a unique kind of practical reasoning dialogical, grounded in precedent, at ease with irresolvable disagreement, and deeply concerned with justice, compassion, human dignity, and free will. The article also looks at talmudic teachings on education, economic ethics, gender, charity, and peace; compares talmudic dialectic with Greek philosophy and Roman legal traditions; and explores the Talmud’s lasting impact on medieval Jewish thinkers, especially Maimonides, as well as on modern legal, hermeneutical, and interfaith conversations. It ends by reflecting on the Talmud’s ongoing importance for comparative religion, legal studies, and intellectual history, presenting it as a living text that still shapes Jewish self‑understanding and offers a distinctive model of religious‑legal pluralism.
Keywords: Talmud, Talmudic Philosophy, Jewish Law, Halakha, Aggadah Mishnah
