The Problem of Evil: Eight Views in Dialogue
One of those rare questions in philosophy that is not only technically recalcitrant but also engages the hearts and minds of the broad community is the so-called 'problem of evil': How can the existence of an absolutely perfect God be reconciled with the existence of suffering and evil? This collection of dialogues between eight philosophers of religion explores new ways of thinking about this longstanding problem, in the process reorienting and reinvigorating the philosophical debate around the relationship between God, goodness and evil: How exactly are these three notions connected, if at all? Is God the cause, or author, of evil and suffering? How is the goodness of God to be understood, and how is divine goodness related to human morality? Does God's perfect goodness entail that God must have reasons for permitting or bringing about suffering, and if so what could his reasons be? These questions are of momentous existential and theoretical interest, and they have exercised the finest intellects across the centuries. The time is ripe for a wholesale reconsideration of the problem of evil. To make progress towards this goal, eight distinct perspectives are placed in mutual dialogue, giving voice to both traditional and relatively unorthodox approaches. What emerges from these critical but friendly exchanges is a diversity of fruitful and innovative ways of thinking about the nature of divinity and its relationship to evil.
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The Problem of Evil: Eight Views in Dialogue
One of those rare questions in philosophy that is not only technically recalcitrant but also engages the hearts and minds of the broad community is the so-called 'problem of evil': How can the existence of an absolutely perfect God be reconciled with the existence of suffering and evil? This collection of dialogues between eight philosophers of religion explores new ways of thinking about this longstanding problem, in the process reorienting and reinvigorating the philosophical debate around the relationship between God, goodness and evil: How exactly are these three notions connected, if at all? Is God the cause, or author, of evil and suffering? How is the goodness of God to be understood, and how is divine goodness related to human morality? Does God's perfect goodness entail that God must have reasons for permitting or bringing about suffering, and if so what could his reasons be? These questions are of momentous existential and theoretical interest, and they have exercised the finest intellects across the centuries. The time is ripe for a wholesale reconsideration of the problem of evil. To make progress towards this goal, eight distinct perspectives are placed in mutual dialogue, giving voice to both traditional and relatively unorthodox approaches. What emerges from these critical but friendly exchanges is a diversity of fruitful and innovative ways of thinking about the nature of divinity and its relationship to evil.
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The Problem of Evil: Eight Views in Dialogue

The Problem of Evil: Eight Views in Dialogue

The Problem of Evil: Eight Views in Dialogue

The Problem of Evil: Eight Views in Dialogue

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Overview

One of those rare questions in philosophy that is not only technically recalcitrant but also engages the hearts and minds of the broad community is the so-called 'problem of evil': How can the existence of an absolutely perfect God be reconciled with the existence of suffering and evil? This collection of dialogues between eight philosophers of religion explores new ways of thinking about this longstanding problem, in the process reorienting and reinvigorating the philosophical debate around the relationship between God, goodness and evil: How exactly are these three notions connected, if at all? Is God the cause, or author, of evil and suffering? How is the goodness of God to be understood, and how is divine goodness related to human morality? Does God's perfect goodness entail that God must have reasons for permitting or bringing about suffering, and if so what could his reasons be? These questions are of momentous existential and theoretical interest, and they have exercised the finest intellects across the centuries. The time is ripe for a wholesale reconsideration of the problem of evil. To make progress towards this goal, eight distinct perspectives are placed in mutual dialogue, giving voice to both traditional and relatively unorthodox approaches. What emerges from these critical but friendly exchanges is a diversity of fruitful and innovative ways of thinking about the nature of divinity and its relationship to evil.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780192554765
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Publication date: 06/20/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 731 KB

About the Author

N.N. Trakakis is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the Australian Catholic University. He has authored The God Beyond Belief (Springer, 2007) and The End of Philosophy of Religion (Continuum, 2008). He has also co-edited, with Graham Oppy, the five-volume History of Western Philosophy of Religion (Acumen, 2009) and the two-volume History of Philosophy in Australia and New Zealand (Springer, 2014).

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. The Problem of Suffering: A Thomistic Approach, Eleonore Stump
Responses by Bishop, Oppy, and Trakakis
Replies by Stump
2. On Identifying the Problem of Evil and the Possibility of Its Theist Solution, John Bishop
Responses by Stump, Oppy, and Trakakis
Replies by Bishop
3. Problems of Evil, Graham Oppy
Responses by Stump, Bishop, and Trakakis
Reply by Oppy
4. Anti-Theodicy, N. N. Trakakis
Responses by Stump, Bishop, and Oppy
Replies by Trakakis
5. Evil, Feminism and a Philosophy of Transformation, Beverley Clack
Responses by Nagasawa, Tilley, and Gleeson
Replies by Clack
6. The Problem of Evil for Atheists, Yujin Nagasawa
Responses by Clack, Tilley, and Gleeson
Replies by Nagasawa
7. A Trajectory of Positions, Terrence W. Tilley
Responses by Clack, Nagasawa, and Gleeson
Replies by Tilley
8. God and Evil Without Theodicy, Andrew Gleeson
Responses by Clack, Nagasawa, and Tilley
Replies by Gleeson
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