Religion D1: An Introduction


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Section D of our course deals with the "problem of evil" argument -- which says that the existence of evil shows that there can't be an all-good and all-powerful God.

We'll begin with a short introduction to the problem of evil from our main textbook (from pages 249-50 of Philosophy of Religion: Selected Readings (second edition), edited by Peterson, Hasker, Reichenbach, and Basinger).

These computerized exercise materials are copyrighted (c) 2002 by Harry J. Gensler; but they may be distributed freely.

A Classic Formulation

One popular formulation of the "problem of evil" argument goes as follows:
    If God doesn't want to prevent evil, then he isn't all-good.
    If God isn't able to prevent evil, then he isn't all-powerful.
    Either God doesn't want to prevent evil, or he isn't able.
    Therefore, either God isn't all-powerful, or he isn't all-good.
Believers generally dispute the first premise. They claim that God, even though he is all-good, has reasons for not wanting to prevent evil.

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This set has 10 problems.