dc.description | In the following remarks, I shall attempt to marshal the data that point to the overwhelming likelihood that this legal material (about two-thirds of the total) was orally transmitted, and that the analytical and dialectical redactional layer, perhaps 55[percent] of the Babylonian Talmud (hereafter: the Bavli), was also orally composed. This long period of oral transmission and composition took place against a background of what I shall term "pervasive orality" in Babylonia, as contrasted with the greater prevalence of written transmission in the Greco-Roman cultural sphere.// | eng |