In his recent version of the logical problem of evil, James Sterba articulates several moral principles that, on the assumption that God is morally perfect, seem to entail God’s non-existence. Such moral principles, however, only apply to God on the assumption that he is a moral agent. I first argue against this assumption by appealing to recent work by Mark Murphy before, secondly, suggesting an alternative way to frame Sterba’s argument in terms of divine love. One can distinguish God’s motivation to promote creaturely welfare on the basis of love from a motivation grounded in morality, and I claim that doing so results in a stronger form of the logical argument
James Sterba has presented a powerful and existentially sincere form of the problem of evil, arguing...
This paper provides an analysis of James Sterba’s argument from evil in the world and the author’s T...
In 2019 the noted ethicist and political philosopher James Sterba published a new deductive version ...
In his recent version of the logical problem of evil, James Sterba articulates several moral princip...
Jim Sterba’s Is a Good God Logically Possible? looks to resurrect J. L. Mackie’s logical argument fr...
The logical argument from evil, generally thought to have been defused by Alvin Plantinga’s free wil...
James Sterba has constructed a powerful argument for there being a conflict between the presence of ...
In this article, I offer a response to James P. Sterba’s moral argument for the non-existence of God...
James Sterba argues that a good God is not logically possible. He argues that what he calls the Paul...
In Is a Good God Logically Possible?, James Sterba uses the analogy of a just political state to dev...
The central argument of James Sterba’s “Is a Good God Logically Possible?” relies crucially on the n...
In this paper, I provide a defence of theism against James Sterba’s version of the logical problem o...
How can we make sense of God’s moral goodness if God cannot be subject to moral obligations? This qu...
The aim of this paper is to defend James Sterba’s version (2019) of the logical argument from evil a...
I argue that James Sterba’s argument from evil involves a category mistake. He applies moral princip...
James Sterba has presented a powerful and existentially sincere form of the problem of evil, arguing...
This paper provides an analysis of James Sterba’s argument from evil in the world and the author’s T...
In 2019 the noted ethicist and political philosopher James Sterba published a new deductive version ...
In his recent version of the logical problem of evil, James Sterba articulates several moral princip...
Jim Sterba’s Is a Good God Logically Possible? looks to resurrect J. L. Mackie’s logical argument fr...
The logical argument from evil, generally thought to have been defused by Alvin Plantinga’s free wil...
James Sterba has constructed a powerful argument for there being a conflict between the presence of ...
In this article, I offer a response to James P. Sterba’s moral argument for the non-existence of God...
James Sterba argues that a good God is not logically possible. He argues that what he calls the Paul...
In Is a Good God Logically Possible?, James Sterba uses the analogy of a just political state to dev...
The central argument of James Sterba’s “Is a Good God Logically Possible?” relies crucially on the n...
In this paper, I provide a defence of theism against James Sterba’s version of the logical problem o...
How can we make sense of God’s moral goodness if God cannot be subject to moral obligations? This qu...
The aim of this paper is to defend James Sterba’s version (2019) of the logical argument from evil a...
I argue that James Sterba’s argument from evil involves a category mistake. He applies moral princip...
James Sterba has presented a powerful and existentially sincere form of the problem of evil, arguing...
This paper provides an analysis of James Sterba’s argument from evil in the world and the author’s T...
In 2019 the noted ethicist and political philosopher James Sterba published a new deductive version ...