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| | Antilawyerism and Antisemitism |
 | | For Langmuir and others, antisemitism may defined as much in terms of what it is not as in terms of what it is: namely, antisemitism is neither a continuation of theological anti-Judaism (the sort of writing we find in Paul, Augustine, and others) nor a response to actual characteristics about Jews. |
 | | Namely, since something that closely resembles antisemitism (namely, antilawyer stereotypes) coincides with something that closely resembles anti-Judaism (namely, anti-logo-nomianism) both in the Jewish context and in the context of the American law, we might infer that the two phenomena are connected in some way. |
 | | Antilawyerism and antisemitism have a common root, and that root is our culture’s most basic notions of what it means to be a human being: a spirit, a soul. |
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