Related%20passage for Chullin 17:37
מר סבר
only in respect of the prohibition [to be eaten], but there is no presumption in respect of defilement.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' R. Eliezer's argument is: The animal is now forbidden only because of the presumption which arose during its lifetime. Now, during its lifetime the animal was forbidden only to be eaten; it certainly could not defile. The effect, therefore, of the presumption can only be to render the animal forbidden to be eaten and not that it should defile.');"><sup>21</sup></span>
Explore related%20passage for Chullin 17:37. In-depth commentary and analysis from classical Jewish sources.