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The complexity of history and evil: a reply to Trakakis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2006

KIRK DURSTON
Affiliation:
New Scholars Society, 7718 R.R. #2, Wallenstein, ON, Canada, N0B 2S0

Abstract

I have presented an argument from the consequential complexity of history against certain types of evidential arguments from evil; ‘The consequential complexity of history and gratuitous evil’ Religious Studies, 36 (2000), 65–80. Nick Trakakis has responded with two objections; ‘Evil and the complexity of history: a response to Durston’ Religious Studies, 39 (2003), 451–458. He argues that the consideration of future consequences to the end of actual history may be irrelevant and, also, that one does not need detailed knowledge about possible worlds to conclude that there are better worlds. In this paper I show that, given the complexity of history, both of his objections fail to move us out of the state of agnosticism regarding what God should or should not permit. Thus, my original argument remains intact.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2006 Cambridge University Press

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