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Suppose a boy was born Bein Hashemashos. Since this is a period of "maybe it's still day, maybe it's already night," seemingly the doubt would translate into "maybe he was born on day 1, maybe he was born on day 2."

Consider 13 years later. Since we're stringent regarding Biblical doubts, this boy would seemingly have to act on day 1 as if he is already a Bar Mitzvah, yet simultaneously would not be able to fulfill others' obligations on the presumption that he is not yet a Bar Mitzvah. By day 2 he's a Bar Mitzvah either way and the doubt is settled.

On Bein Hashemashos on the evening of this boy's Bar Mitzvah, between days 1 and 2, would he be able to fulfill others' obligations by a sfek sfeka?

By the same definition of Bein Hashemashos being "maybe it's still day, maybe it's already night," one can pose that "maybe day 1 is his Bar Mitzvah, and even if day 2 is his Bar Mitzvah, maybe it's already night and therefore day 2." The doubt is also reversible: "maybe it's already night and therefore day 2, and even if it's still day 1, maybe day 1 is his Bar Mitzvah anyway."

Or perhaps since both doubts ultimately stem from the same question of whether Bein Hashemashos is day or night, it would be considered one doubt and not two?

DonielF
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1 Answers1

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Here are three possible reasons why this might not work:

  1. This Sfek Sfeka would tell us that he was born earlier, that would be against the chazoko that his mother was pregnant.

  2. The two sefekus do not start at the same time, one starts when he is born or day one, and the second safek by bein hashemashos.

  3. Whatever you would want him to do, might be a davar sh'yesh lo matirim, since he can do it later. [Y"d shach 110/56]

פרי זהב
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  • For the third point, in re: davar sh'yesh lo matirin, isn't that always true? Whatever I want a gadol to do in bein hashmashot, he could do later when it is definitely night. – Ze'ev misses Monica Jun 16 '20 at 22:41
  • Third point might not be true for, ex, leading the Tzibbur as Chazzan and saying Barchu and Kaddish during Maariv. – DonielF Jun 16 '20 at 23:54
  • @DonielF Aren't those cases D'Rabonon and one safek would be enough ? Also one can be misplalel later, which might make it a "yesh lo matirin". – פרי זהב Jun 17 '20 at 00:37
  • @Ze'evmissesMonica Can you please give me an example. – פרי זהב Jun 17 '20 at 00:39
  • How can you say kiddush in bein hashmashot as you can definitely do it later? Or count sefira? Or say Maariv? There are likely better examples. – Ze'ev misses Monica Jun 17 '20 at 02:04
  • @Ze'evmissesMonica An adult can make Kiddush by day during the time you can make tosefes Shabbos, after plag., but a child becoming bar mitzvah should actually wait until after night even to be motzie himself [See Kovetz Halachos Shabbos 9/7. Mariv id D'Rabonon, and Krias Shema should be repeated. Sefira is D'Rabonon as well, and can work from plag bedieved, but one should recount by night. This is why I was looking for an example to really understand the question. – פרי זהב Jun 17 '20 at 02:39
  • To motzi a deoraysa we don't even rely just on 13 years without saaros, so the question is usually moot. – Double AA Jun 17 '20 at 12:43