Question
I saw the question someone asked about conjoined twins. Indeed, conjoined twins can and do survive to adulthood. One famous pair I’m aware of appear as a two-headed woman who is alive now, 34 years old, and is married. Scientifically, she has the status of two conjoined twins with two separate minds that think independently and with two separate consciousnesses and personalities, while at the same time sharing some lower organs. She is married, but her husband considers himself married to just one of the twins. This woman is not Jewish. Suppose a Jewish two-headed person like this existed. What would be the implications in Jewish law? Would this person be allowed to marry?

Question
Is it permitted to work an extremely dangerous job that risks one’s life but pays a lot of money? I am exploring the job of changing light bulbs on radio towers. One workday pays $130,000. I could live off of that easily for a year. I could do it for a few years and not have to work most of the time and then retire when I’m young. The danger is, if you fall, you die. About a dozen people a year die doing this job.

Question
According to Halacha, If there are conjoined twins and one wants to convert and the other doesn’t, is it possible for them to convert? The reason I ask is because bodily immersion in a mikvah is necessary to convert, but the Shevuot yaakov ruled conjoined twins are 2 people

Question
I believe the Talmud In Pesachim states ruach rah falls on men who walk between two women. According to poskim who’re makpid about this should a man who walks between two women go to the mikveh after the fact