•  222
    תאודיציות שואפות להסביר מדוע אל כל-יכול, יודע-כל, וטוב עשוי לאפשר את קיומם של הרוע והסבל בעולם. אני שואב השראה מרבי משה חיים לוצאטו ומפתח "תאודיציה של בניית עולם". הרעיון המרכזי הוא שהאל רצה שברואיו יהיו שותפים בבריאת העולם ויממשו את עצמם כבוראים קטנים בצלם אלוהים. לכן, האל ברא עולם בלתי שלם בו יש הרבה סכנות ואנשים רעים, והאל השאיר לברואיו את המשימה להשלים את המלאכה וליצור אוטופיה בכוחות עצמם. בכוחה של תאודיציה זו להסביר את קיומו של כל מופע של רוע שאנו מכירים בעולם, וכל כמות שהיא של רוע, וכל זאת…Read more
  •  78
    A Luzzattian World-Building Theodicy
    Religious Studies. forthcoming.
    Theodicies aim at explaining why an omnipotent, omniscient, and wholly good God might enable the existence of evil and the suffering it causes. I draw on an idea from 18th-century Italian Jewish philosopher and kabbalist Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto to develop a “world-building theodicy”. The main idea is that God wanted his creatures to participate in the creation of the world and manifest themselves as godlike mini creators. Therefore, God created an unfinished world full of natural dangers and …Read more
  •  77
    Theodicies attempt to explain why evil and suffering might exist in a world governed by an omnipotent, omniscient, and wholly good God. Some theodicies focus on pointing out benefits that suffering seems necessary for, though in many cases the benefits are primarily for someone other than the sufferer. Some philosophers find it morally objectionable for God to let one person suffer in order to benefit someone else, and this is thought to be a weakness of some otherwise promising theodicies. I di…Read more
  •  1495
    Non-Player Characters in the Real World: A Threefold Problem for Theodicies
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Non-player characters, or “NPCs", are characters in video games and in tabletop role-playing games like Dungeons and Dragons who are controlled by the game itself or by the storyteller, rather than by one of the players. NPCs in the real world would appear as normal living creatures, yet they would lack phenomenal consciousness. According to a popular theodical approach, God enables evil to exist because it is necessary for bringing about a greater good. However, some theodicies are built around…Read more
  •  372
    Some free-will defenses appeal to the intuition that the love of creatures who God causally determined to love him is less valuable than the love of creatures who chose to love God freely, in the libertarian sense. I challenge that intuition directly. I attempt to discredit the intuition in question by demonstrating that no analogies regarding human-related cases can support it. In each case I treat, I argue either that the case is disanalogous to God’s case, or that granting the lover libertari…Read more