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Moral knowledge and epistemic limits: a theistic framework for understanding blameless ignoranceInternational Journal for Philosophy of Religion 98 (1): 209-222. 2025.There is an underexplored puzzle in the philosophy of religion that presents a _prima facie_ reason to believe God does not exist: the problem of blameless moral ignorance. If God is omniscient, omnipotent, and morally perfect, then he would desire and ensure that all non-blameable rational agents have sufficient moral knowledge to act rightly. Yet cases of sincere moral ignorance persist. Drawing on a recent formulation of this problem by Elbert (Ergo an Open Access Journal of Philosophy 8:32, …Read more
Knoxville, Tennessee, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Moral Epistemology |
| Ethics of Artificial Intelligence |
| Moral Arguments for Theism |
| Philosophy of Religion |