Quran and the Talmud
Claim
Quran and the Talmud
This lane stays fixed so the research flow always starts from the thesis, then branches into the texts and clips that structure it.
Passage coverage
5 mapped passages
Evidence coverage
6 clips connected
Overflow clips
0 uncategorized
Passages
3 total mentions feeding this claim
1 total mentions feeding this claim
1 total mentions feeding this claim
1 total mentions feeding this claim
1 total mentions feeding this claim
Evidence lanes
A superchat referenced this verse to argue the Quran reflects Talmudic material and to question its independent authority.
In Q&A, this verse was cited to argue that the Qur'an contains a saying parallel to rabbinic literature, raising the issue of whether the Qur'an is echoing the Talmud rather tha...
Quran and the Talmud • DEBATE: Which Religion Portrays Jesus with More Respect, Islam or Christianity? | PODCAST
Cited to argue that the Quran quotes a Talmud-like maxim about killing one person being like killing all mankind.
Quran and the Talmud • DEBATE: Which Religion Portrays Jesus with More Respect, Islam or Christianity? | PODCAST
Quoted alongside Quran 18:109 to argue that the Quran borrows wording or ideas from rabbinic literature.
In Q&A, this Talmud passage was cited as the source of the 'whoever kills one soul' saying, to challenge the Qur'an's relationship to Jewish rabbinic tradition.
Quran and the Talmud • DEBATE: Which Religion Portrays Jesus with More Respect, Islam or Christianity? | PODCAST
Quoted in comparison with a rabbinic saying, to argue that the Quran echoes Jewish tradition about the inexhaustibility of God's words.