A Kantian Response to the Problem of Evil: Living in the Moral World

Author:

Insole Christopher J.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Theology and Religion, Durham University, Palace Green, Durham DH1 3LE, UK

2. Institute of Religion and Critical Inquiry, Australian Catholic University, 115 Victoria Parade, Fitzroy, Melbourne, VIC 3065, Australia

Abstract

James Sterba has presented a powerful and existentially sincere form of the problem of evil, arguing that it is logically impossible for God to exist, given that there are powerful moral requirements to prevent evil, where one can, and that these requirements would bind an all-powerful and good God, who would indeed be able to prevent such evil. The ‘Kantian’ argument that I set out, if accepted, would undermine the following stage of Sterba’s argument: Significant and especially horrendous evil consequences of immoral actions do obtain all around us, which, if God exists, would have to be through his permission. The Kantian argument will hold that we are able to believe that, in some sense, such horrendous evil consequences do not really obtain, although they appear to. The claim is not that the Kantian argument is ‘persuasive’, but that if some Kantian assumptions are granted, we do have a response to Sterba, which throws open a different way of looking at things. I conclude with some more informal reflections on what we might take away from the Kantian argument, even if we do not accept the deep assumptions, or the progression of the argument. I will not worry too much about demonstrating that this is a ‘correct reading’ of Kant, although I think it is.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Religious studies

Reference32 articles.

1. Dyson, Robert (1998). The City of God against the Pagans, Cambridge University Press. Bks. 13–14.

2. The Unimportance of Kant’s Highest Good;Auxter;Journal of the History of Philosophy,1979

3. Beck, Lewis White (1960). A Commentary on Kant’s Critique of Practical Reason, University of Chicago Press, Phoenix Books.

4. Guyer, Paul (2002). The Cambridge Companion to Kant and Modern Philosophy, Cambridge University Press.

5. The Importance and Function of Kant’s Highest Good;Friedman;Journal of the History of Philosophy,1984

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