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96David O'Connor God and inscrutable evil: In defence of theism and atheism. (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 1998). Pp. XIII+273. £53 hbk, £19.95 pbk (review)Religious Studies 35 (2): 229-240. 1999.
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560God and Moral RealismInternational Philosophical Quarterly 45 (1): 103-118. 2005.Only God, or a very god-like being, can provide both the objectivity and the normative power necessary for a really robust moral realism. Further, I argue that the classical theist position—the view of Augustine, Anselm, and Aquinas—that morality is grounded in the nature of God, supplies a better metaphysical background for a strong moral realism than Divine Command Theory does. I respond briefly to the criticism that belief in God can have no positive role to play in solving ethical problems, …Read more
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117Peter van Inwagen (ed.) Christian Faith and The Problem of Evil. (Grand Rapids MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2004). Pp. xiv+316. ISBN 0 8028 2697 0 (review)Religious Studies 42 (1): 111-116. 2006.
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137Defending BoethiusInternational Philosophical Quarterly 51 (2): 241-257. 2011.Among those who study medieval philosophy there is a divide between historians and philosophers. Sometimes the historians chide the philosophers for failing to appreciate the historical factors at work in understanding a text, a philosopher, a school, or a system. But sometimes the philosopher may justly criticize the historian for failing to engage the past philosopher adequately as a philosopher. Here I defend a philosophically charitable methodology and offer two examples, taken from John Mar…Read more
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277Back to EternalismFaith and Philosophy 26 (3): 320-338. 2009.Against my interpretation, Brian Leftow argues that Anselm of Canterbury held a presentist theory of time, and that presentism can be reconciled with Anselm’s commitments concerning divine omnipotence and omniscience. I respond, focusing mainly on two issues. First, it is difficult to understand the presentist theory which Leftow attributes to Anselm. I articulate my puzzlement in a way that I hope moves the discussion forward. Second, Leftow’s examples to demonstrate that presentism can be reco…Read more
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108Anselm on praising a necessarily perfect beingInternational Journal for Philosophy of Religion 34 (1). 1993.
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155Anselm and His Islamic Contempories on Divine Necessity and EternityAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 81 (3): 373-393. 2007.Anselm holds that God is simple, eternal, and immutable, and that He creates “necessarily”—He “must” create this world. Avicenna and Averroes made the same claims, and derived as entailments that God neither knows singulars nor interacts with the spatio-temporal universe. I argue that Anselm avoids these unpalatableconsequences by being the first philosopher to adopt, clearly and consciously, a four-dimensionalist understanding of time, in which all of time is genuinely present to divine eternit…Read more
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251Time, foreknowledge, and alternative possibilitiesReligious Studies 48 (2). 2012.In this article we respond to arguments from William Hasker and David Kyle Johnson that free will is incompatible with both divine foreknowledge and eternalism (what we refer to as isotemporalism). In particular, we sketch an Anselmian account of time and freedom, briefly defend the view against Hasker's critique, and then respond in more depth to Johnson's claim that Anselmian freedom is incompatible with free will because it entails that our actions are 'ontologically necessary'. In defending …Read more
Areas of Specialization
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Religion |
Areas of Interest
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Religion |