•  29
    All too skeptical theism
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 68 (1-3): 15-29. 2010.
    Skeptical theism contends that, due to our cognitive limitations, we cannot expect to be able to determine whether there are reasons which justify God’s permission of apparently unjustified evils. Because this is so, the existence of these evils does not constituted evidence against God’s existence. A common criticism is that the skeptical theist is implicitly committed to other, less palatable forms of skepticism, especially moral skepticism. I examine a recent defense against this charge mount…Read more
  •  10
    Are alternative pasts plausible? A reply to Thomas Flint
    Religious Studies 36 (1): 103-105. 2000.
    Thomas Flint has claimed that my argument against Molinism suffers from a 'seemingly irreparable logical gap'. He also contests a key assumption of that argument, namely that 'something which has had causal consequences in the past is ipso facto a hard, fixed, settled fact about the past'. In reply, I show that there is no logical gap at all in the argument. And I argue that, even though Molinists have reasons, based on Molinist principles, for rejecting the assumption in question, the assumptio…Read more
  •  4
  •  1
    Christian Philosophy (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 10 (1): 107-112. 1993.