
God, Evil, and Human Learning
A Critique and Revision of the Free Will Defense in Theodicy
- 116 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
God, Evil, and Human Learning
A Critique and Revision of the Free Will Defense in Theodicy
About this book
Revises the traditional free will defense regarding the existence of evil in the world of a loving God.
God, Evil, and Human Learning explores the age-old question: How is it possible to believe in the God of the Christian faith when the world contains so many grievous evils? Author Fred Berthold Jr. examines the most influential argument used by Christian theologians to answer that question, the "free will defense, " which holds that God is not responsible for the evil in the world, but that evil arises from the human misuse of free will. He points out the weaknesses of this defense and provides a more adequate concept of free will. Berthold argues that free will is a complex of abilities which are acquired-if acquired-through human learning in the context of experiences of actual goods and evils and their consequences. He revises the "free will defense" and offers a new view of the relationship between God and his creatures.
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Information
Table of contents
- God, Evil, and Human Learning
- Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Central Importance of the Free Will Defense
- 3. Why Doesn’t God Cause Us to Have a Wholly Virtuous Free Will?
- 4. Should the Traditional Free Will Defense Be Revised?
- 5. The Concept of a Limited God
- 6. The Concept of Free Will
- 7. A Revised Free Will Defense
- 8. An Ecological Theology
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index of Names
- Index of Subjects