Description
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewDespite the fact that some of the essays in this volume date back as early as 1985, the philosophy still feels fresh. With her characteristic clarity and precision, Zagzebski guides her reader through familiar territory into entirely new insights in the philosophy of religion... [The] value of this volume comes from the contribution it makes to revealing unnoticed connections in Zagzebski's philosophy of religion. It provides good evidence that she is a deeply systematic philosopher. * Derek Christian Haderlie, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *
Table of ContentsIntroduction I. Foreknowledge and Fatalism 1. Divine Foreknowledge and Human Free will (1985) 2. Eternity and Fatalism (2011) 3. Divine Foreknowledge and the Metaphysics of Time (2014) II. The Problem of Evil 4. An Agent-based Approach to the Problem of Evil (1996) 5. Weighing Evils: the C.S. Lewis Approach (co-author Joshua Seachris, 2007) 6. Good Persons, Good Aims, and the Problem of Evil (2017) III. Death, Hell, and Resurrection 7. Religious Luck (1994) 8. Sleeping Beauty and the Afterlife (2005) IV. God and Morality 9. The Virtues of God and the Foundations of Ethics (1998) 10. The Incarnation and Virtue Ethics (2002) V. Omnisubjectivity 11. The Attribute of Omnisubjectivity (2013, 2016) VI. The Rationality of Religious Belief 12. The Epistemology of Religion: The Need for Engagement (2004) 13. First person and Third Person Reasons and Religious Epistemology (2011) 14. Religious Diversity and Social Responsibility (2001) VII. Rational Religious Belief, Self-Trust, and Authority 15. Epistemic Self-Trust and the Consensus Gentium Argument (2011) 16. A Modern Defense of Religious Authority (2016) VIII. God, Trinity, and the Metaphysics of Modality 17. What if the Impossible Had Been Actual? (1990) 18. Christian Monotheism (1989)