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191Thomas Aquinas Holds Fast: Objections to Aquinas within Today's Debate on Divine ActionHeythrop Journal 54 (4): 658-667. 2013.Various authors within the contemporary debate on divine action in nature and contemporary science argue both for and against a Thomistic account of divine action through the notions of primary and secondary causes. In this paper I argue that those who support a Thomistic account of divine action often fail to explain Aquinas' doctrine in full, while those who argue against it base their objections on an incomplete knowledge of this doctrine, or identify it with Austin Farrer's doctrine of doubl…Read more
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104Science and religion in latin America: Developments and prospectsZygon 50 (2): 480-502. 2015.The state of the debate surrounding issues on science and religion in Latin America is mostly unknown, both to regional and extra-regional scholars. This article presents and reviews in some detail the developments since 2000, when the first symposium on science and religion was held in Mexico, up to the present. I briefly introduce some features of Latin American academia and higher education institutions, as well as some trends in the public reception of these debates and atheist engagement wi…Read more
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130Great minds think alike Thomas Aquinas and Alvin Plantinga on divine action in naturePhilosophia Reformata 79 (1): 8-20. 2014.In the first part of this paper I argue that even if at first Alvin Plantinga’s reasons for allowing special divine action seem similar to those of Thomas Aquinas, particularly in De Potentia Dei for allowing miracles, the difference in their metaphysical language makes Aquinas’ account less prone to the objections raised against Plantinga’s. In the second part I argue that Plantinga errs when recurring to quantum mechanics for allowing special divine action, making God to be a cause among cause…Read more
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119God in the Age of Science? A Critique of Religious Reason. By Herman PhilipsePhilosophical Quarterly 63 (253): 835-837. 2013.© 2013 The Editors of The Philosophical QuarterlyHerman Philipse sets out in this book an extremely detailed and thorough case for dismissing the claims of natural theology in the age of science. His main strategy is to refute the arguments of Richard Swinburne, claiming that Swinburne presents the strongest case for natural theology in a scientific age; hence if Swinburne fails, natural theology generally is discredited. Whether or not the broader conclusion is warranted, that we should all bec…Read more
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940Providence, Contingency, and the Perfection of the UniversePhilosophy, Theology and the Sciences 2 (2): 137-157. 2015.In this paper, I present and analyse the theological reasons given by contemporary authors such as Robert J. Russell, Thomas Tracy and John Polkinghorne, as well as thirteenth‑century scholar Thomas Aquinas, to admit that the created universe requires being intrinsically contingent in its causing, in particular referring to their doctrines of providence. Contemporary authors stress the need of having indeterminate events within the natural world to allow for God’s providential action within crea…Read more
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154Evidence and Religious Belief. Edited by Kelly James Clark, Raymond J. VanArragonPhilosophical Quarterly 63 (253): 811-813. 2013.© 2013 The Editors of The Philosophical QuarterlyThe volume that Kelly James Clark and Raymond J. VanArragon have put together is excellent. The question about evidence for religious belief has been raised in recent times particularly within Reformed epistemology, and the authors writing in this volume face these issues with vigorous and persuasive arguments. The book includes eleven essays, and is divided into three parts. The first part is devoted to exploring whether religious belief needs to…Read more
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2011A Cause Among Causes? God Acting in the Natural WorldEuropean Journal for Philosophy of Religion 7 (4): 99--114. 2015.Contemporary debates on divine action tend to focus on finding a space in nature where there would be no natural causes, where nature offers indeterminacy, openness, and potentiality, to place God’s action. These places are found through the natural sciences, in particular quantum mechanics. God’s action is then located in those ontological ”causal-gaps’ offered by certain interpretations of quantum mechanics. In this view, God would determine what is left underdetermined in nature without disru…Read more
Ignacio Silva
Universidad Austral
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Universidad AustralResearch Fellow