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Aaron Zinger's avatar

Obeying the spirit of the law shows respect for the judgment of the lawgiver. Obeying the letter, loopholes and all, instead shows respect for the authority of the lawgiver. Judaism and Islam are more about obeying God's commands than agreeing with His opinions--the Talmud has "it is not in Heaven," the Hadith have God needing to be talked down from commanding that Muslims pray a hundred times every day. The parent/child iterated game is also about authority--if the child just defied the parent, the parent would need to escalate or be defied on something more important later.

My intuition about the implicit magic system for the Devil's bargains is that they're only valid if the Devil keeps his word. The Devil can't just drag whoever he wants to off to Hell, or else he wouldn't bother with bargains. So he must be dependent on some external arbitration process, one that might decide to nullify the father's bargain if the Devil didn't keep the one with the son.

(Or the Devil just respects getting lawyered.)

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Theodore Whitfield's avatar

For any computer system, the "letter of the law" IS the "spirit of the law". Ultimately, it's a mechanical device, so operationally the spirit of the law is exactly how the law is defined, no more and no less. That's why programming is so hard: it's easy to have pleasant intentions, but it's difficult to get the commands exactly right so that they express those intentions. When the code doesn't align with the spirt, that's not a "loophole" -- it's a "bug".

Orthodox Judaism is unusual among religions in that it is so focused on words and texts, and enormous effort is devoted to determining the exact meaning of any passage. So, again, the "letter" of the law really is the same thing as the "spirit" of the law, which is God. God is all-powerful, and presumably is able to craft accurate prose regulations. So if the rules don't explicitly forbid getting a goy to flip the switch, then that means that God doesn't object. You might think that's a strange way for God to be, but that's your problem, and I think the Orthodox would object that somehow this is exploiting a "loophole".

Random fact: some elevators have a setting that makes the elevator continually cycle going up and down, and automatically stops at every floor. That's because pressing a button for your floor is deemed to be labor and thus proscribed during the Sabbath. So for the Sabbath the staff sets the elevator to this cycle mode, and then everyone can use the elevator with violating the rules.

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