•  1420
    Theodicy and Toleration in Bayle’s Dictionary
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 51 (1): 49-73. 2013.
    Theodicy and Toleration Seem at first glance to be an unlikely pair of topics to treat in a single paper. Toleration usually means putting up with beliefs or actions with which one disagrees, and it is practiced because the beliefs or actions in question are not disagreeable enough to justify interference. It is usually taken to be a topic for moral and political philosophy. Theodicy, on the other hand, is the attempt to solve the problem of evil; that is, to explain the origin of suffering and …Read more
  •  67
    Anstey, Peter R., John Locke and Natural Philosophy (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 67 (2): 423-425. 2013.
  •  815
    Reductio ad Malum
    Modern Schoolman 88 (3/4): 201-221. 2011.
    Pierre Bayle is perhaps most well-known for arguing in his Dictionary (1697) that the problem of evil cannot be solved by reason alone. This skepticism about theodicy is usually credited to a religious crisis suffered by Bayle in 1685 following the unjust imprisonment and death of his brother, the death of his father, and the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. But in this paper I argue that Bayle was skeptical about theodicy a decade earlier than these events, from at least the time of his Sedan…Read more
  •  1256
    The Moral Certainty of Immortality in Descartes
    History of Philosophy Quarterly 28 (3): 227-247. 2011.
    In the Dedicatory Letter of the Meditations, René Descartes claims that he will offer a proof of the soul’s immortality, to be accomplished by reason alone. This proof is also promised by the title page of the first edition of the Meditations, which includes the words “in which the existence of God and the immortality of the soul are demonstrated.” But in the Synopsis, and later in his replies to objections, Descartes gives a more nuanced account of the possibility of proving immortality and whe…Read more