Study Bava Kamma folio 11B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
that there is a possibility that part of the afterbirth will emerge without part of the fetus inside, and the reason that the rabbis forbid eating the afterbirth is due to a rabbinic decree prohibiting a case where part of an afterbirth emerges from the womb and part of it remains inside, due to the
The Talmud cites another halakha taught by Ulla, citing R' Elazar: And Ulla says that R' Elazar says: With regard to a male firstborn child who was mauled by an animal within 30 days of his birth and died, one is not required to redeem him, as the requirement to do so, by paying 5 sela to a priest
And similarly, Rami bar Ḥama taught a baraita: Since it is stated: “Yet you shall redeem” (Numbers 18:15), one might have thought that even if a male firstborn child was mauled by an animal within 30 days of his birth one should redeem him. Therefore, the verse states “yet you shall redeem”; the ad
The Talmud cites another halakha taught by Ulla, citing R' Elazar: And Ulla says that R' Elazar says: A large animal, such as a cow or a horse, is acquired by the buyer pulling the animal.
The Talmud asks: But didn’t we learn in a Mishnah (Kiddushin 25b): A large animal is acquired by passing the reins of the animal to the buyer? The Talmud explains: R' Elazar states his opinion in accordance with the opinion of that tanna, i.e., the Rabbis, as it is taught in a baraita: And the Rabb