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articles
1. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Lucy Sheaf Leibniz on Divine Love
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This paper considers two objections which can be levelled against Leibniz’s account of divine love. The first is that he cannot allow that divine love is gracious because he is committed to the view that love is properly proportioned to the perfection perceived in the beloved; the second is that God is cruel to those who are damned and so cannot be said to love all. I argue that Leibniz has the resources to rebut—or at least blunt—each of these objections.
2. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Kenneth L. Pearce God’s Impossible Options
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According to Michael Almeida, reflections on free will and possibility can be used to show that the existence of an Anselmian God is compatible with the existence of evil. These arguments depend on the assumption that an agent can be free with respect to an action only if it is possible that that agent performs that action. Although this principle enjoys some intuitive support, I argue that Anselmianism undermines these intuitions by introducing impossible options. If Anselmianism is true, I argue, then both God and creatures may be free to do the impossible.
3. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Brian Scott Ballard Christianity and the Life Story
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Should we understand our lives as stories? Narrativism answers Yes, a view that has recently been the subject of vigorous debate. But what should Christian philosophers make of narrativism? In this essay, I argue that, in fact, narrativism is a commitment of Christian teaching. I argue that there are practices which Christians have decisive reasons to engage in, which require us to see our lives as narratives, practices such as confession and thanksgiving.
4. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Bruce Langtry Evaluating a New Logical Argument From Evil
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J. L. Schellenberg, in “A New Logical Problem of Evil,” argues that (if God exists) God has, of necessity, a disappreciation of evil, operating at a metalevel in such a way as to give God a non-defeasible reason to rule out actualizing a world containing evil. He also argues that since God’s motive in creating the world is to share with finite beings the good that God experiences prior to creation, which is good without evil, it follows that God will create a world that contains no evil. I investigate in detail the foregoing lines of argument and provide grounds for rejecting them.
5. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Mark Boespflug Thomistic Faith Naturalized? The Epistemic Significance of Aquinas’s Appeal to Doxastic Instinct
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Aquinas’s conception of faith has been taken to involve believing in a way that is expressly out of keeping with the evidence. Rather than being produced by evidence, the confidence involved in faith is a product of the will’s decision. This causes Aquinas’s conception of faith to look flagrantly irrational. Herein, I offer an interpretation of Aquinas’s position on faith that has not been previously proposed. I point out that Aquinas responds to the threat of faith’s irrationality by explicitly maintaining that one may reasonably believe by faith because of an instinct to believe. I go on to point out other instances in which instincts amount to legitimate epistemic grounds for Aquinas. Given that this dimension of Aquinas’s thought is not well developed, I close by introducing some extensions of it in the work of John Henry Newman as well as points of contrast.
book reviews
6. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Brian Leftow Perfect Being Attacked! Jeff Speaks’s The Greatest Possible Being
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Jeff Speaks’s The Greatest Possible Being criticizes several sorts of perfect being theology. I show that his main discussions target what are really idealizations of actual perfect-being projects. I then focus on whether Speaks’s idealizations match up with the real historical article. I argue that, in one key respect, they do not and that it would be uncharitable to think that one of them does. If the idealizations do not represent what perfect being thinkers have actually been doing, a question arises about how much Speaks’s critique should worry those pursuing projects modelled on real historical perfect being theology.
7. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
J.L.A. Donohue Barbara H. Fried: Facing Up to Scarcity: The Logic and Limits of Nonconsequentialist Thought
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8. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Johannes Grössl Wm. Curtis Holtzen: The God Who Trusts: A Relational Theology of Divine Faith, Hope, and Love
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9. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Alexander Hyun Oliver D. Crisp: Approaching the Atonement: The Reconciling Work of Christ
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10. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
James T. Turner, Jr. Mark S. McLeod-Harrison: Saving the Neanderthals: Sin, Salvation, and Hard Evolution
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11. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 38 > Issue: 2
Greg Welty Richard Rice: The Future of Open Theism: From Antecedents to Opportunities
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