Providence and the Problem of Evil
Swinburne, Richard,
Nolloth Professor of the Philosophy of the Christian Religion,
University of Oxford
Print publication date: 1998
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-823798-3 doi:10.1093/0198237987.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
Unless he has very strong reason for supposing that there is a God, a theist needs a theodicy (or at least needs to begin to develop one) in order justifiably to believe that there is a God. Part 2 of this book describes the good goals that God might be seeking to produce in his Universe—beauty; creatures having knowledge (in a largely internalist sense), having their good desires satisfied, with a free will to do actions that promote each others’ well-being, being of use to others, and worshipping God. Part 3 shows how the possibility of moral evil, and the actual occurrence of natural evil (providing knowledge of possible good and bad actions, and the scope for good response) are necessary to secure these ends. God has the right to allow some creatures to suffer for the benefit of others, so long as he compensates them in this life or after death. The expected value of allowing the evils in order to achieve the good goals is positive.
Keywords: Christianity, cosmogony, cosmology, creation, evil, free will, God, internalism, knowledge, philosophy of religion, problem of evil, Richard Swinburne, theism, theodicy Table of Contents
Introduction
1.
The Need for Theodicy
2.
Theodicy in Christian Tradition
3.
Beauty
4.
Thought and Feeling
5.
Action
6.
Worship
7.
The Fact of Moral Evil; and Free Will
8.
The Range of Moral Evil; and Responsibility
9.
Natural Evil and the Scope for Response
10.
Natural Evil and the Possibility of Knowledge
11.
The Evils of Sin and Agnosticism
12.
God's Right
13.
Weighing Good Against Bad
Index
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