• The normatively relativised logical argument from evil (NRLA) of John Bishop and Ken Perszyk (2011) argues that belief in a personal omniperfect God is incompatible with any redemptive theodicy in which God both contrives the conditions of our earthly suffering and rescues us from these conditions by means of and for the sake of relationship with God, since any such union would be less than perfectly good as a personal relationship. Their argument is normatively relativised because the claim tha…Read more
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    PhD Thesis (2024): Enhanced Agency Theodicy - An Eschatological Solution to the Problem of Evil
    Dissertation, School of Advanced Study, University of London. 2024.
    Enhanced agency theodicy is a new afterlife-centred solution to the problem of evil which I show has greater explanatory power than two influential rivals, the soul-making and redemptive suffering theodicies of John Hick and Eleonore Stump. Derived from the concept of an omniperfect God, enhanced agency theodicy is also potentially compatible with notions of divinity, human nature and the afterlife in Islam. Central to this solution is a good-maximising view of God’s purpose and an analysis of t…Read more
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    The Realm of Enhanced Agency: A Choice-Based Account of Heavenly Freedom
    Agatheos European Journal for the Philosophy of Religion 2 (1): 85-105. 2025.
    Free will theodicies that rely on a good afterlife to explain how earthly evils are ultimately outweighed or defeated are challenged by what Simon Kittle has termed the lack of value problem concerning heavenly freedom: that a heaven with no freedom to make good and evil choices is not a supreme good that could justify God’s creation of evil. I take up Kittle’s suggestion that this problem can be addressed by a choice-based account of heavenly freedom which gives some idea of how the types and n…Read more