•  271
    The Use of Fiction in Apologetics
    with Caden Farr
    Southeastern Theological Review 16 (1): 65-71. 2025.
    Apologetics is the practice of providing a logical defense for Christian beliefs. At first glance, it might seem that creative arts, like fiction, have little to offer this endeavor. Typically, stories are not considered arguments, and arguments are the backbone of any rational defense. However, in this essay, we propose that imaginative storytelling does have a meaningful role in apologetics. In the first section, we will examine how fiction impacts its audience and explain how those effects ca…Read more
  •  425
    A Defense of “Extreme” Intentionalism
    Southeastern Theological Review 16 (1): 7-23. 2025.
    Intentionalism is a theory about the interpretation of artworks, particularly literary works. In this essay, I defend a form of intentionalism according to which the intentions of authors are both necessary and sufficient to fix the meaning of their literary works. In the first part, I offer brief definitions of intentions, interpretation, and work-meaning. Second, I defend E. D. Hirsch’s argument for the necessity condition. Finally, I argue that prominent objections to the sufficiency conditio…Read more
  •  83
    The overall claim of this dissertation is that nativism and naturalism are incompatible. Further, given the strength of the nativist arguments against their empirical counterparts, the way is open for an inductive argument for the existence of God. The particular species of nativism currently occupying the role of a dominant research program is linguistic nativism, the view that a grammar or a mental language is innately housed in the human mind. Thus, the argument will focus on showing that the…Read more