•  160
    Must God Create the Best Possible World?
    International Philosophical Quarterly 19 (2): 203-212. 1979.
    I ARGUE THAT THE NOTION OF THE BEST POSSIBLE WORLD IS MEANINGLESS AND THEREFORE A CHIMERA, BECAUSE FOR ANY WORLD WHICH MIGHT BE SO DESIGNATED, THERE COULD ALWAYS BE ANOTHER WHICH WAS BETTER, EITHER IN BEING POPULATED BY BEINGS WITH BETTER OR A GREATER QUANTITY OF GOOD CHARACTERISTICS, OR ELSE BY BEING MORE OPTIMIFIC.
  •  328
    Introduction to critical thinking
    McGraw Hill Higher Education. 2001.
    This text uses the educational objectives of Benjamin Bloom as six steps to critical thinking (namely: knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation). The book starts with the absolute basics (for example, how to find the topic, issue, and thesis) vs. the usual "explaining and evaluating arguments" and fine distinctions that easily can lose students.
  •  74
    Evil and a Reformed View of God
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 24 (1/2). 1988.
    Generally the theist's defense against the argument from evil invokes the libertarian ideal. But this route is not open to compatibilist Reformed theologians. They must show either that God's possibly creating humans with a more perfect nature is either an impossibility or that his doing so violates some fundamental principle of value. I argue that the compatibilist Reformed theologian is unsuccessful in both. Specifically, in the latter case, there is no ground for thinking that redemption …Read more
  •  54
    The Only Wise God (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 28 (3): 340-342. 1988.
    Review of William Lane Craig's "The Only Wise God," in which he defends divine foreknowledge by invoking God's middle knowledge.
  •  104
    Why Is God Good?
    Journal of Religion 60 (1): 51-66. 1980.
    I explore two positions on divine goodness: God is good because of his nature or is good because of his acts. The first is advanced by Thomas Aquinas through two basic arguments: that God is good because of his being as pure act, and that God is good because of God's desirableness. Goodness predicated because of being runs into conflict with divine freedom. The second leads to the view that God freely wills to do the good and as such could, if he so chose, do evil. But though doing evil is…Read more
  •  203
    The cosmological argument and the causal principle
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 6 (3). 1975.
    I reply to Houston Craighead, who presents two arguments against my version of the cosmological argument. First, he argues that my arguments in defense of the causal principle in terms of the existence being accidental to an essence is fallacious because it begs the question. I respond that the objection itself is circular, and that it invokes the questionable contention that what is conceivable is possible. Against my contention that the causal principle might be intuitively known, I reply t…Read more
  •  8
    Buddhism, Karma, and Immortality
    In Paul Badham & Linda Badham (eds.), Death and Immortality in the Religions of the World, Paragon House Publishers. pp. 141-157. 1987.
    I first discuss the Buddhist concept of the self as lying between nihilism and substantialism, understood in terms of sets of skandhas and later momentariness. I then discuss the role of karma as a causal nexus that brings the skandhas into a state of co-ordination and whether this role is subjective or objective. Finally, I discuss the import of this view that there is no substantial self but only momentary events of various discrete sorts on the meaning and possibility of life after death a…Read more
  •  145
    On Disembodied Resurrected Persons: A Reply: BRUCE R. REICHENBACH
    Religious Studies 18 (2): 225-229. 1982.
    In a recent article in Religious Studies, Professor P. W. Gooch attempts to wean the orthodox Christian from anthropological materialism by consideration of the question of the nature of the post-mortem person in the resurrection. He argues that the view that the resurrected person is a psychophysical organism who is in some physical sense the same as the ante-mortem person is inconsistent with the Pauline view of the resurrected body; rather, according to him, Paul's view is most consistent wit…Read more
  •  48
    Thomistic Papers IV ed. by Leonard A. Kennedy (review)
    The Thomist 54 (2): 371-376. 1990.
    Review of a Thomist critique of the Reformed Epistemology of Alvin Plantinga and Nicholas Wolterstorff. The authors contend that P & W misunderstand Aquinas and that their own project of Reformed epistemology is either inadequate or mistaken.
  •  111
    Hasker on Omniscience
    Faith 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
  •  157
    Why there is Something rather than Nothing (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 23 (1): 107-111. 2006.
    I review Copan's and Craig's book, in which they present the kalam cosmological argument for God's existence, and Rundle's book refuting the existence of God. The latter argues that theological language has no empirical cash value and hence cannot assist in explanation. Further, since the only genuine substances are material, there is no place for God in explaining the universe. The universe simply necessarily is.