a) Aka added artifice. Judaism implies "old" testament; Christianity implies "new" testament...which one was added?
b) Talmud has mishnah (origin) and gemara (addition) to establish an ongoing conflict about addition (suggested information) while protecting origin (perceivable inspiration).
c) Gentiles ignore origin for addition, hence...
not a single one
a) There can be only one.
b) "not" implies suggested nihil-ism (Latin nihilo; nothing) tempting ones de-nial of everything perceivable, when consenting to suggested.
a) Aka added artifice. Judaism implies "old" testament; Christianity implies "new" testament...which one was added?
b) Talmud has mishnah (origin) and gemara (addition) to establish an ongoing conflict about addition (suggested information) while protecting origin (perceivable inspiration).
c) Gentiles ignore origin for addition, hence...
a) There can be only one.
b) "not" implies suggested nihil-ism (Latin nihilo; nothing) tempting ones de-nial of everything perceivable, when consenting to suggested.
c) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logic_in_Islamic_philosophy ...compare this to logos/logic/reason as the foundation of Christianity and notice how a so called jew isn't bound to the confines of either.
https://www.torahvsjudaism.com/
To learn implies to teach "self" and vice versa. Viewing the torah and talmud as law suggested by another tempts one to ignore that.
Aka mosaic/muse - "to muzzle self; to be absorbed in thought"; which happens if one ignores perceivable for suggested.
He-brew his-story to make/magic jew/you fall for it...
Judah/yehudah - "to praise; value" aka ones consent evaluating the suggested values by another.
Being implies anointed one (christ)...ignoring this by consenting to a chosen ones suggestion makes one a traitor (judas) to self.
Traitor/tradere - "transfer over" aka ones consent to the suggestion of another, which also implies religion/religio - "to bind anew"
-ism implies a suggestion by another tempting ones consent. Consenting to any suggested -ism establishes a conflict of reason aka versus/verses/wer - "to turn"... https://www.etymonline.com/word/verse#etymonline_v_4738
That's how few turn many against each other within conflicts of reason.