John D. Brey
Well-Known Member
In an essay composed of a thread here a few years ago (Adam Kadmon and Her Son) a discussion was engaged about the flawed metaphysics of gender that contaminates the Masoretic tradition for interpreting the Torah text. That essay argued that the first human was, contrary to the Masoretic tradition for exegeting the text, what today we consider female. And since at that time there was no male, the first human would have been non-gendered, such that we could speak of the first human as a non-gendered female.
All of that's vouchsafed by sound science such that the secondariness of the male in sound science implies in a scientific sense, as has been argued in these parts, that the male of the Masoretic tradition would, in the new context of the original body being female, be precisely what the Masoretic tradition makes the female body: contingent, manufactured rather than created, and thus, a secondary kind of female rather than a genuine alterity or full binary opposition to the originality of the female body.
All of this is argued and referenced in the original essay which nevertheless leaves its final, explosive claim (that in sound exegesis of the original Torah text the flesh of the first human is female, while the blood is male) dangling and unexamined. In the final part of the original essay, the gender duality now associated with genitalia is said to originally be associated with the distinction between flesh versus blood; blood being male (and thus being added to ha-adam's body secondarily) and the flesh, which is female, being created first.
This essay hopes to support the idea that Adam Kadmon's menses is the key to the distinction between the first covenant and the second in a manner similar to how the blood of Adam Kadmon is the key to correcting the flawed gender dynamics found in the Masoretic treatment of gender as found in the first covenant when interpreted through the dark lens of the Masoretic Text.
John
All of that's vouchsafed by sound science such that the secondariness of the male in sound science implies in a scientific sense, as has been argued in these parts, that the male of the Masoretic tradition would, in the new context of the original body being female, be precisely what the Masoretic tradition makes the female body: contingent, manufactured rather than created, and thus, a secondary kind of female rather than a genuine alterity or full binary opposition to the originality of the female body.
All of this is argued and referenced in the original essay which nevertheless leaves its final, explosive claim (that in sound exegesis of the original Torah text the flesh of the first human is female, while the blood is male) dangling and unexamined. In the final part of the original essay, the gender duality now associated with genitalia is said to originally be associated with the distinction between flesh versus blood; blood being male (and thus being added to ha-adam's body secondarily) and the flesh, which is female, being created first.
This essay hopes to support the idea that Adam Kadmon's menses is the key to the distinction between the first covenant and the second in a manner similar to how the blood of Adam Kadmon is the key to correcting the flawed gender dynamics found in the Masoretic treatment of gender as found in the first covenant when interpreted through the dark lens of the Masoretic Text.
John
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