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71Emergent Dualism and Emergent CreationismPhilosophia Christi 20 (1): 93-97. 2018.Joshua Farris offers “emergent creationism” as an alternative to emergent dualism. It is argued that emergent creationism cannot deliver some of the advantages claimed for it, and that Farris’s objections to emergent dualism are not compelling.
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88The Present Is Necessary! Rejoinder to RotaFaith and Philosophy 29 (4): 466-471. 2012.My account of free will entails that events of the present moment are “necessary” in the same way that the past is necessary. I argue that Michael Rota’s main objection to this account is unsuccessful. I also argue that Rota’s synchronous account of contingency is inferior to the diachronic account which I favor.
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94The Souls of Beasts and MenReligious Studies 10 (3). 1974.‘The organic body signifies the latent crisis of every known ontology and the touchstone of “any future one which will be able to come forward as a science.”’ —Hans Jonas ‘Thales…said that the magnet has a soul in it because it moves the iron.’— Aristotle
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36A Cosmic Christ?Philosophia Christi 18 (2): 333-341. 2016.Keith Ward advocates modifications in the doctrine of God similar to those affirmed by open theism. However, he rejects social Trinitarianism, in spite of his own recognition that the two views have often gone together. I argue that, beyond this, Ward really rejects the Trinitarian and Christological doctrines of the church, as expressed in the creeds of Nicaea and Chalcedon. The implications of this are explored; one implication is that Ward’s Christ is less “cosmic” than the traditional view h…Read more
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52William J. Wainwright (ed.), God, philosophy, and academic cultureInternational Journal for Philosophy of Religion 43 (3): 185-187. 1998.
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54The Reality of Time and the Existence of God (review)International Studies in Philosophy 23 (3): 98-98. 1991.
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78The Openness of God: A Biblical Challenge to the Traditional Understanding of GodDowners Grove: Intervarsity Press. 1994.Written by five scholars whose expertise extends across the disciplines of biblical, historical, systematic, and philosophical theology, this is a careful and ...
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90Which God? What Power? A Response to Andrew H. GleesonSophia 49 (3): 433-445. 2010.Andrew H. Gleeson has written an essay commenting on an exchange between Dewi Z. Phillips and me, arguing that I was mistaken to dismiss Phillips’ criticism of the standard definition of omnipotence as unsuccessful. Furthermore, he charges Swinburne, me, and analytic theists in general, with an excessive anthropomorphism that obliterates the distinction between Creator and creature. In response, I contend that all of Gleeson’s criticisms are unsound
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90What Is Naturalism? And Should We Be Naturalists?Philosophia Christi 15 (1): 21-34. 2013.It seems reasonable to seek a definition of naturalism, yet an accurate general definition proves to be elusive. After considering proposals from Quine, Nagel, and Chalmers, I propose that naturalism as understood by the majority of contemporary naturalists is best defined by the conjunction of mind-body supervenience, an understanding of the physical as mechanistic, and the causal closure of the physical domain. I then argue that naturalism so defined is in principle unable to account for the e…Read more
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The Nature of Human Beings: A Mediating ViewIn Melville Y. Stewart & Chih-kʻang Chang (eds.), The Symposium of Chinese-American Philosophy and Religious Studies, International Scholars Publications. pp. 1--37. 1998.
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79Benjamin H. Arbour, Philosophical Essays Against Open TheismEuropean Journal for Philosophy of Religion 10 (4): 227-232. 2018.
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62What Has CERN to Do with Jerusalem?Philosophia Christi 20 (1): 53-60. 2018.There is disagreement concerning the relevance of scientific data to a theological account of the nature of human beings. I contend that science is indeed relevant, but not in a way that should lead us to discount philosophical and theological ideas about human nature. I mention five different findings of science that have significant implications for our understanding of the mind-body relationship.
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73Hasker on OmniscienceFaith and Philosophy 4 (1): 86-92. 1987.I contend that William Hasker’s argument to show omniscience incompatible with human freedom trades on an ambiguity between altering and bringing about the past, and that it is the latter only which is invoked by one who thinks they are compatible. I then use his notion of precluding circumstances to suggest that what gives the appearance of our inability to freely bring about the future (and hence that omniscience is incompatible with freedom) is that, from God’s perspective of foreknowledge, i…Read more
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5Should Natural Science Include Revealed Truth? A Response to PlantingaPerspectives on Science and Christian Faith 45 (1): 57-59. 1993.
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78The Metaphysics of Everyday Life: An Essay in Practical Realism (review)Faith and Philosophy 28 (1): 108-111. 2011.
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252The Emergent SelfCornell University Press. 1999.In The Emergent Self, William Hasker joins one of the most heated debates in contemporary analytic philosophy, that over the nature of mind.
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198The foreknowledge conundrumInternational Journal for Philosophy of Religion 50 (1/3): 97-114. 2001.
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216The constitution view of persons: A critiqueInternational Philosophical Quarterly 44 (1): 23-34. 2004.This paper discusses the “constitution view” of human persons, as set forth by Lynne Rudder Baker in her book, Persons and Bodies. The metaphysical notion of constitution is explained and briefly defended. It is shown, however, that the view that human persons are constituted by their bodies faces difficulties in specifying the “person-favorable conditions” under which a human body constitutes a person. Furthermore, none of the arguments in support of the claim that humans are constituted by (bu…Read more
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157Swinburne’s Modal Argument for DualismFaith and Philosophy 15 (3): 366-370. 1998.Most critics of Richard Swinburne’s modal argument for mind-body substance dualism have alleged that the argument is unsound, either because its premises are false or because it commits a modal fallacy. I show that the argument is epistemically circular, and thus provides no support for its conclusion even if it is sound.
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79“The (Non)-Existence of Molinist Counterfactuals”In Ken Perszyk (ed.), Molinism: The Contemporary Debate, Oxford University Press. pp. 25--37. 2011.