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articles
1. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Michael J. Almeida ON VAGUE ESCHATOLOGY
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Ted Sider’s Proportionality of Justice condition requires that any two moral agents instantiating nearly the same moral state be treated in nearly the same way. I provide a countermodel in supervaluation semantics to the proportionality of justice condition. It is possible that moral agents S and S' are in nearly the same moral state, S' is beyond all redemption and S is not. It is consistent with perfect justice then that moral agents that are not beyond redemption go determinately to heaven and moral agents that are beyond all redemption go determinately to hell. I conclude that moral agents that are in nearly the same moral state may be treated in very unequal ways.
2. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Nathan Jacobs CONTRA CLAYTON: TOWARD AN AUGUSTINIAN MODEL OF ORGANISM
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In this essay, I examine Philip Clayton’s efforts to construct a philosophical theology that fits the current scientific view of organism. Clayton capitalizes on an evolutionary outlook, which sees organism as an emergent entity composed of lower organic unities, and which, at the highest level of organic development (brain), yields an emergent, non-physical phenomenon (mind). Presuming a bilateral relationship between mind and body, Clayton argues for a picture of God-world relations where world is analogous to body and God is analogous to emergent mind. Contrary to Clayton, I argue that panentheism does not naturally accommodate the current scientific picture of organic development, and as an alternative, I submit St. Augustine of Hippo’s theistic modifications to Plotinian NeoPlatonism. My goal is to demonstrate that Augustine’s metaphysic offers a strong foundation for the construction of a theologically robust and scientifically satisfying philosophy of organism.
3. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Theodore Guleserian ONTOLOGICAL DETERMINATION AND THE GROUNDING OBJECTION TO COUNTERFACTUALS OF FREEDOM
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Alvin Plantinga’s reply to the grounding objection to propositions now called counterfactuals of freedom, originally made by Robert Adams, can be interpretedas follows: if, for the sake of argument, we require counterfactuals of freedom to be grounded in something that makes them true, we can simply (and trivially) say that there are corresponding counterfactual facts that ground them. I argue that such facts, together with the facts about the situations in which moral agents find themselves, would ontologically determine that the agents perform their acts, rendering these acts unfree. Thus, I maintain that, contrary to Plantinga’s intent, allowing the grounding facts into the divine creation situation entails the falsity of Molinism. If there is no other way that God can know what free creatures would do than through counterfactuals of freedom, divine foreknowledge of human acts is inconsistent with human freedom and moral responsibility.
4. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Travis Dumsday LOCKE ON COMPETING MIRACLES
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It is typically thought that miracles, if they occur, can provide evidence for the truth of religious doctrine. But what if different miracles occur attesting to the truth of different and incompatible religions? How is one to decide between the truth of the supposed revelations? Much of Locke’s short work, A Discourse of Miracles, is concerned with this question. Here I summarize and evaluate Locke’s answer.
5. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
William L. Rowe PETER VAN INWAGEN ON THE PROBLEM OF EVIL
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In his book The Problem of Evil, Van Inwagen aims to establish that the problem of evil is a failure. My article considers his response to the evidential problem of evil. His response relies on a fundamental assumption: “Every possible world God could have actualized contains patterns of suffering morally equivalent to those of the actual world, or else is massively irregular.” While it may not be unreasonable to suggest that it is logically possible that an omnipotent, omniscient being is unable to actualize a better world, a world with somewhat less, prolonged animal suffering, this hardly amounts to an adequate response to the evidential problem of evil, an argument that endeavors to establish that it is more likely than not that an omniscient, omnipotent being could have created such a world.
6. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
John Beaudoin SOBER ON INTELLIGENT DESIGN THEORY AND THE INTELLIGENT DESIGNER
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Intelligent design theorists claim that their theory is neutral as to the identity of the intelligent designer, even with respect to whether it is a natural or a supernatural agent. In a recent issue of Faith and Philosophy, Elliott Sober has argued that in fact the theory is not neutral on this issue, and that it entails theexistence of a supernatural designer. I examine Sober’s argument and identify several hurdles it must overcome.
7. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Elliott Sober INTELLIGENT DESIGN, IRREDUCIBLE COMPLEXITY, AND MINDS—A REPLY TO JOHN BEAUDOIN
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In my paper “Intelligent Design Theory and the Supernatural—the ‘God or Extra-Terrestrial’ Reply,” I argued that Intelligent Design (ID) Theory, when coupled with independently plausible further assumptions, leads to the conclusion that a supernatural intelligent designer exists. ID theory is therefore not neutral on the question of whether there are supernatural agents. In this respect, it differs from the Darwinian theory of evolution. John Beaudoin replies to my paper in his “Sober on Intelligent Design Theory and the Intelligent Designer,” arguing that my paper faces two challenges. In the present paper, I try to address Beaudoin’s challenges.
book reviews
8. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Robert Oakes The God Delusion
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9. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
John Lippitt Divine Motivation Theory
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10. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Brian Leftow Divinity and Maximal Greatness
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11. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Andrew Nam Rethinking the Ontological Argument: A Neoclassical Theistic Response
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12. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 4
Andrew J. Dell’Olio The Metaphysics of Creation: Aquinas’s Natural Theology in Summa contra gentiles II
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articles
13. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 3
Henk G. Geertsema KNOWING WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF CREATION
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How should belief in creation affect our theoretical understanding of knowledge? In this essay I argue that traditional views of knowledge, illustrated by Plato and Descartes, cannot do justice to the integral meaning of reality as God’s creation. Making use of two metaphors, the visual metaphor for theoretical knowledge and the biblical one of hearing the divine promise-command to be, I sketch the outlines of a theoretical framework that takes belief in creation as its starting point. My approach is based upon insights of Reformational philosophy and leads to a view in which beliefs and propositions concerning isolated states of affairs are replaced by an emphasis on the concrete situations in which knowing occurs. Important notions like rationality and objectivity lose their central place to responsibility and acknowledgement. I claim that in this way the biblical understanding of reality as God’s creation can be better appreciated than in approaches that take their starting point in Greek and modern philosophical conceptions.
14. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 3
James B. Gould THE GRACE WE ARE OWED: HUMAN RIGHTS AND DIVINE DUTIES
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Traditional views of grace assert that God owes us nothing. Grace is undeserved, supererogatory and free. In this paper I argue that while this is an accurate characterization of creating grace, it is not true of saving grace. We have no right to be created as spiritual beings whose true good is found in relationship with God. But once we exist as spiritual beings, God does owe us a genuine offer of the salvation that constitutes our highest fulfillment. Creating grace is undeserved. Saving grace is deserved (being based on our inherent worth and vital interests as spiritual beings) but unearned (it is not based on anything we have done).
15. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 3
Douglas V. Henry REASONABLE DOUBTS ABOUT REASONABLE NONBELIEF
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In Divine Hiddenness and Human Reason, J. L. Schellenberg argues that the phenomenon of “reasonable nonbelief” constitutes sufficient reason to doubtthe existence of God. In this essay I assert the reasonableness of entertaining doubts about the kind of reasonable nonbelief that Schellenberg needs for a cogent argument. Treating his latest set of arguments in this journal, I dispute his claims about the scope and status of “unreflective nonbelief,” his assertion that God would prevent reasonable nonbelief “of any kind and duration,” and his confidence that we can know that some doubters are not self-deceived.
16. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 3
John Turri Practical and Epistemic Justification in Alston's Perceiving God
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This paper clarifies and evaluates a premise of William Alston’s argument in Perceiving God. The premise in question: if it is practically rational to engage ina doxastic practice, then it is epistemically rational to suppose that said practice is reliable. I first provide the background needed to understand how thispremise fits into Alston’s main argument. I then present Alston’s main argument, and proceed to clarify, criticize, modify, and ultimately reject Alston’s argument for the premise in question. Without this premise, Alston’s main argument fails.
17. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 3
Thomas Talbott WHY CHRISTIANS SHOULD NOT BE DETERMINISTS: REFLECTIONS ON THE ORIGIN OF HUMAN SIN
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In response to Lynne Rudder Baker’s intriguing paper, “Why Christians Should Not Be Libertarians,” I suggest that, even if a Christian simply lets the chips fall where they may with respect to the dispute between libertarians and compatibilists, a Christian should not be a determinist. I also offer for consideration a rather controversial non-Augustinian explanation for the near universality and seeming inevitability of human sin.
18. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 3
Alexander R. Pruss TONER ON JUDGMENT AND ETERNALISM
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Patrick Toner has argued that eternalism, the doctrine that all times are ontologically on par, conflicts with the Catholic view of judgment as based on the state of the soul at death. For, he holds, it is arbitrary that judgment should be based on what happened at some particular time, unless, as presentism holds, that time is the only that really exists. I shall argue that his argument fails because the eternalist can say that judgment is simultaneous with the state of soul that is being judged, and there is nothing arbitrary about judging something at t on the basis of its state at the same time t.
19. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 3
Trent Dougherty, Ted Poston HELL, VAGUENESS, AND JUSTICE: A REPLY TO SIDER
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Ted Sider’s paper “Hell and Vagueness” challenges a certain conception of Hell by arguing that it is inconsistent with God’s justice. Sider’s inconsistencyargument works only when supplemented by additional premises. Key to Sider’s case is a premise that the properties upon which eternal destinies superveneare “a smear,” i.e., they are distributed continuously among individuals in the world. We question this premise and provide reasons to doubt it. The doubts come from two sources. The first is based on evidential considerations borrowed from skeptical theism. A related but separate consideration is that supposing it would be an insurmountable problem for God to make just (and therefore non-arbitrary) distinctions in morally smeared world, God thereby has sufficient motivation not to actualize such worlds. Yet God also clearly has motivation only to actualize some member of the subset of non-smeared worlds which don’t appear non-smeared. For if it was obvious who was morally fit for Heaven and who wasn’t, a new arena of great injustice is opened up. The result is that if there is a God, then he has the motivation and the ability to actualize from just that set of worlds which are not smeared but which are indiscernible from smeared worlds.
reviews
20. Faith and Philosophy: Volume > 25 > Issue: 3
Kevin Timpe Philosophical Theology and Christian Doctrine
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