Author(s)
Marshall NaylorKeywords
godevil
infinite value
the problem of evil
Anselmianism
Religions. Mythology. Rationalism
BL1-2790
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Prominent approaches to the problems of evil assume that even if the Anselmian God exists, some worlds are better than others, all else being equal. But the assumptions that the Anselmian God exists and that some worlds are better than others cannot be true together. One description, by Mark Johnston and Georg Cantor, values God’s existence as exceeding any transfinite cardinal value. For any finite or infinite amount of goodness in any possible world, God’s value infinitely exceeds that amount. This conception is not obviously inconsistent with the Anselmian God. As a result, the prominent approaches to the problems of evil are mistaken. The elimination of evil does not, in fact, improve the value of any world as commonly thought. Permitting evil does not, in fact, diminish the value of any world as commonly thought.Date
2018-01-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:9e3bd0ab3a2a4d02912b80616893d0772077-1444
10.3390/rel9010020
https://doaj.org/article/9e3bd0ab3a2a4d02912b80616893d077