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Free Will and God's Universal Causality: The Dual Sources Account (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Description
The traditional doctrine of God's universal causality holds that God directly causes all entities distinct from himself, including all creaturely actions. But can our actions be free in the strong, libertarian sense if they are directly caused by God?
W. Matthews Grant argues that free creaturely acts have dual sources, God and the free creaturely agent, and are ultimately up to both in a way that leaves all the standard conditions for libertarian freedom satisfied. Offering a comprehensive alternative to existing approaches for combining theism and libertarian freedom, he proposes new solutions for reconciling libertarian freedom with robust accounts of God's providence, grace, and predestination. He also addresses the problem of moral evil without the commonly employed Free Will Defense. Written for analytic philosophers and theologians, Grant's approach can be characterized as "neo-scholastic" as well as "analytic," since many of the positions defended are inspired by, consonant with, and develop resources drawn from the scholastic tradition, especially Aquinas.
Other Books in Series
The Rational Ontological Argument: Modality, Ontology and God (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
A Defence of Theological Virtue Ethics (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Contemplating Divine Simplicity: Five Views (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Cosmopsychism and Original Sin: Corruption in a Conscious Universe (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Free Will in Philosophical Theology (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
The Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism: Context, Exposition, and Repercussions (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Sacred Music, Religious Desire and Knowledge of God: The Music of Our Human Longing (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
The Rational Ontological Argument: Modality, Ontology and God (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
The Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism: Context, Exposition, and Repercussions (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
A Spiritual Geography of Early Chinese Thought: Gods, Ancestors, and Afterlife (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
A Spiritual Geography of Early Chinese Thought: Gods, Ancestors, and Afterlife (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
The Mechanics of Divine Foreknowledge and Providence: A Time-Ordering Account (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Goodness, God, and Evil (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Well-Being and Theism: Linking Ethics to God (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Why God Must Do What Is Best: A Philosophical Investigation of Theistic Optimism (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
The Kalam Cosmological Argument, Volume 2: Scientific Evidence for the Beginning of the Universe (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
Free Will and God's Universal Causality: The Dual Sources Account (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
On Paul Holmer: A Philosophy and Theology (Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy of Religion)
