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adell [148]
3 years ago
6

Judaism clergy is unique because

History
2 answers:
vivado [14]3 years ago
6 0
Oh hey there! :)


The Judaism clergy is unique because the <span>rabbi's are needed for everything.


I hope this is the answer you were looking for. As always, it is my pleasure to help students like you!
</span>
jonny [76]3 years ago
3 0
The answer to this problem is they are needed for every ritual , most rituals can be performed without clergy Rabbi's are needed for everything.

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Sumer (a region of Mesopotamia, modern-day Iraq) was the birthplace of writing, the wheel, agriculture, the arch, the plow, irrigation and many other innovations, and is often referred to as the Cradle of Civilization. The Sumerians developed the earliest known writing system – a pictographic writing system known as cuneiform script, using wedge-shaped characters inscribed on baked clay tablets – and this has meant that we actually have more knowledge of ancient Sumerian and Babylonian mathematics than of early Egyptian mathematics. Indeed, we even have what appear to school exercises in arithmetic and geometric problems.

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They were perhaps the first people to assign symbols to groups of objects in an attempt to make the description of larger numbers easier. They moved from using separate tokens or symbols to represent sheaves of wheat, jars of oil, etc, to the more abstract use of a symbol for specific numbers of anything.

Starting as early as the 4th millennium BCE, they began using a small clay cone to represent one, a clay ball for ten, and a large cone for sixty. Over the course of the third millennium, these objects were replaced by cuneiform equivalents so that numbers could be written with the same stylus that was being used for the words in the text. A rudimentary model of the abacus was probably in use in Sumeria from as early as 2700 – 2300 BCE.

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Babylonian Numerals

Babylonian Numerals

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