•  4
    Reflection Kant’s Journey on Evil
    In Andrew Chignell (ed.), Evil: A History (Oxford Philosophical Concepts), Oxford University Press. pp. 315-321. 2019.
    This reflection offers an overview of the development of Kant’s thought on evil from a Leibnizian starting point to his definitive stance in _Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason._ It was a journey with two significant milestones along the way. First, his recognition that what he termed “physical evil” was not evil at all but rather just the workings of nature with harmful consequences. Second, that evil, despite its negative results, is ontologically positive. The journey’s final desti…Read more
  •  26
    Kant was engaged with the subject of theodicy throughout his career and not merely in his 1791 treatise explicitly devoted to the subject. George Huxford traces Kant’s thought on theodicy throughout his career to show not only the continuity of Kant's consideration but also his philosophical development on the subject.
  •  81
    Evil, the Laws of Nature, and Miracles
    Kant Yearbook 10 (1): 43-62. 2018.
    This paper takes a less trodden path in its approach to Kant’s philosophy of religion. Rather than a detailed study of his mature works on the subject, some of his pre-Critical works are examined. These reveal what I hold to be four foundations which remain unchanged through Kant’s philosophical career and thus act to hold up his later work on the subject. The main body of the paper is presented in two parts. In the first, we see that Kant finds that in addition to evil as limitation, there is n…Read more