You're right too" rabbi parable

Appears in 1 lecture.

Appearances across the corpus

TQI_S2018_01 · Total Quality Improvement, Spring 2018 · §3.p8

Tom uses the parable to defuse the student's contradiction about whether this is a half-semester or full-semester course. ("You're right" / "You're right" / "You're right too.")

But getting back to Joel's joke about "you're right too" — he was telling this story about this rabbi who, these two men came to see him, and the first one was complaining about the other person. The rabbi listens and says, you're right. Then the other person tells his side of the story, and the rabbi says, you're right. And the rabbi's wife, who's in the background, says, rabbi how can they both be right? He says, you're right too. So, you're right, it's a half-semester course or a full-semester course — we're all right. There are the five requirements. You will learn something by reading the other students.