God: Savior, Butcher, Or Oblivious Artist? The Theodicy Of Alfred North Whitehead
Data(s) |
03/10/2008
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Resumo |
This paper is a critical examination of Alfred North Whitehead's attempt to solve the traditional problem of evil. Whitehead's conception of evil is crucial to his process cosmology because it is integral to his process cosmology because it is integral to his notion of creation in which evil is understood in relationship to the larger dynamic of God’s creative activity. While Whitehead’s process theodicy is interesting, he fails to successfully escape between the horns of the traditional dilemma. Whitehead is often criticized for treating evil as merely apparent. While some process philosophers, notably Maurice Barineau, have defended Whitehead from this charge, it can be shown that this is an implication of Whitehead’s approach. Moreover, Whitehead’s theodicy fails to address radical moral evil in its concrete dimension in respect to real human suffering. As a result, Whitehead’s theodicy is not relevant to Christian theology. My paper is divided into two parts. I will first briefly discuss the traditional problem of evil and some of the traditional problem of evil and some of the traditional solutions proposed to resolve it. The reminder of the paper will demonstrate why Whitehead’s theodicy addresses the traditional problem of evil only at the expense of theological irrelevancy. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
https://bluetigercommons.lincolnu.edu/philosophy_and_theology/2008/sessions/1 |
Publicador |
Blue Tiger Commons@LincolnU |
Fonte |
Conference on Philosophy and Theology |
Palavras-Chave | #Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion |
Tipo |
text |