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God of this age : Satan in the churches and Letters of the Apostle PaulBrown, Derek Ryan January 2011 (has links)
This thesis aims to elucidate the nature of the references to Satan in the undisputed Pauline corpus. Although scholarship has frequently devoted attention to the various “powers of evil” in Paul’s letters—including principalities, rulers, demons, etc.—insufficient consideration has been given to the figure of Satan as an isolated subject matter. Moreover, scholarship on the individual references to Satan has often neglected Paul’s depiction of Satan’s activity vis-à-vis his apostolic calling. This raises the question, how and why does the Apostle Paul refer to the figure of Satan in his letters? In order to address this question, the thesis commences by examining two key areas of background material. First, Chapter Two investigates the various “images” of Satan in the Hebrew Bible and Second Temple Jewish texts. Instead of delineating a historical sketch of the development of Satan in Jewish thought, emphasis is placed on the various roles in which Satan functions within these writings. Second, Chapters Two and Three investigate two aspects of Paul’s theology which relate to his references to Satan. First, Satan’s place within Paul’s apocalyptic theology is explicated (Chapter Three). Second, the thesis considers Paul’s self-understanding as the Apostle to the Gentiles and, critically, the importance of Paul’s churches for his apostleship (Chapter Four). Chapters Five and Six then utilize the findings of the previous chapters in their examination of the ten clear references to Satan in the undisputed Pauline letters. Chapter Five focuses on the sole reference to Satan in Romans (16:20) and the two references in 1 Thessalonians (2:18; 3:5). Chapter Six then analyzes the several references to Satan in the Corinthian correspondence (1 Cor 5:5; 7:5; 2 Cor 2:11; 4:4; 6:15; 11:14; 12:7), including their collective significance. On the basis of the examination of the Pauline references to Satan, it is argued that Paul—while sharing the Jewish and early Christian understanding of Satan as an enemy and tempter of the people of God—fundamentally characterizes Satan in his letters as the apocalyptic adversary who opposes his apostolic labor (kopos). Paul does so, it is argued, because he believed that his apostleship was pivotal in spreading the gospel at a crucial point in salvation history. The final chapter then anticipates the implications of the study for further research.
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Die ateistiese oplossing vir die probleem van die kwaadMoore, Willem 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study comprises a survey of the atheist solution to the problem of evil that has
occasionally in the past been suggested by philosophers, but has largely been neglected in
the philosophy of religion.
Against this background, the study has two main objectives. It focusses in the first place
on the reasons upon which philosophers like Mackie and McCloskey regard the giving up
of one or more of the attributes of God in theism as an adequate solution to the problem
of evil, considered to be the strongest argument against the rationality of theistic belief.
What the study however would like to add to this objective, is to point to the existence of
an even more fundamental reason upon which it can be claimed that the problem of evil
can be solved along this way and that the emotional pressure so typical of this problem
can be relieved without any serious implications for the belief in God.
Concerning the more negative orientated of these reasons, it is shown that the latter
revolves around the concept of the logical inconsistency of the theistic theory that can
truly be regarded as the rationale of the atheistic argument known as the problem of evil.
Furthermore, this concept also represents the cornerstone of the rejection of theistic
solutions to this problem by Mackie and others as inadequate. In focussing on the origins
of these reasons, it is shown that although the roots of the problem of evil is to be found
in pre-Christian times and it continued to be a point of discussion throughout the whole
of the Apostolic Age and the Middle Ages, it was the period of the Enlightenment and in
particular the legacy of David Hume that became the strongest inspiration of the atheist
rejection of theism in modern times.
Concerning the more positive orientated of these reasons, the focus is on the efforts of
philosophers that have been following the suggestions of Hume and that have against the
background of the deficiencies of the theistic solutions to the problem of evil, started to
experiment with solutions wherein at least one of the constituting propositions of the
problem of evil is rejected. It is also argued that the way to these experiments has been
paved by the contributions of Mill and Geach and that the latter encouraged philosophers
to also belabour the problem of evil from an atheistic point of view.
Against this background, the final focus is on the second objective of the study, namely
to show that there exists an even more fundamental reason upon which it can be claimed
that the problem of evil can be solved along this way and that the emotional pressure so
typical of this problem can be relieved without any serious implications for the belief in
God. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie behels 'n ondersoek na die ateïstiese oplossing vir die probleem van die
kwaad wat weliswaar in die verlede al by geleentheid deur filosowe gesuggereer is, maar
wat nietemin nog nie veel aandag in die godsdiensfilosofiese debat oor hierdie
problematiek geniet het nie.
Binne hierdie raamwerk het die studie twee oogmerke. Dit wil in die eerste plek fokus op
al daardie redes op grond waarvan filosowe soos Mackie en McCloskey meen dat die
skrapping van een of meer van die Goddelike attribute in die teïsme tot 'n toereikende
oplossing van die probleem van die kwaad as sterkste argument teen die rasionele
houdbaarheid van hierdie teorie kan lei. Wat die studie in die tweede plek egter hieraan
wil toevoeg, is om aan te toon dat daar 'n nog meer fundamentele rede bestaan op grond
waarvan daar aangevoer kan word dat die probleem van die kwaad inderdaad langs
hierdie weg en ook sonder ernstige implikasies vir die geloof in God opgelos en die
emosionele druk so eie aan hierdie problematiek verlig kan word.
Wat die meer negatief gerigte van hierdie redes aan betref, word daar verduidelik dat
laasgenoemde rondom die konsep van die logiese inkonsistensie van die teïstiese teorie
sentreer. Laasgenoemde kan met reg as die spil van die ateïstiese argument bekend as die
probleem van die kwaad beskryf kan word en verteenwoordig die rasionaal van die
argumente op grond waarvan Mackie en andere die teïstiese oplossings vir die probleem
van die kwaad as ontoereikend afwys. In 'n nadere omskrywing van die oorspronge van
hierdie redes, word daarop gewys dat alhoewel die probleem van die kwaad sy wortels in
die voor-Christelike tyd het en dit ook dwarsdeur die Patristiek en die Middeleeue In
onderwerp van drukke bespreking gebly het, dit egter die denkklimaat van die Verligting
en in die besonder die nalatenskap van David Hume was wat sedertdien die belangrikste
inspirasie van ateïstiese afwysings van die teïsme geword het.
Wat die meer positief gerigte redes betref, word daar gefokus op ateïsties georiënteerde
filosowe se pogings om op voetspoor van die onderskeidings van Hume en teen die
agtergrond van die leemtes van teïsties georiënteerde oplossings vir die probleem, met
daardie oplossings te eksperimenteer waarin daar van ten minste van een van die
proposisies wat die probleem van die kwaad konstitueer, afstand gedoen word. Daar word
aangevoer dat die weg tot eksperimentering met hierdie oplossings reeds deur onder meer
die opvattings van Mill en Geach gebaan is en dat dit aan filosowe oënskynlik
genoegsame rede gebied het om die probleem van die kwaad ook vanuit 'n ateïstiese
gesigspunt te bearbei.
Teen hierdie agtergrond word daar ten slotte op die tweede oogmerk van die studie
gefokus, naamlik om aan te toon dat daar 'n nog meer fundamentele rede bestaan op
grond waarvan daar aangevoer kan word dat die probleem van die kwaad inderdaad langs
hierdie weg en ook sonder ernstige implikasies vir die geloof in God opgelos en die
emosionele druk so eie aan hierdie problematiek verlig kan word. / wa201509
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Schelling's philosophy of freedomLaughland, John January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Good or evil? : Attitudes to Death in the Harry Potter Novels.Ståhl, Sofia January 2014 (has links)
This essay will look at some characters from the Harry Potter novels, their attitude to deaht and their ability to love. The focus is to look at how their different stances to death and love make them good or evil. Most attention will be given to some key characters: Lord Voldemort, Harry Potter, Severus Snape, and Albus Dumbledore. Their attitudes to death is first to be dealt with, followed by an investigation of their ability to love. After that, a conclusion by analysing more briefly some minor characters who are part of Voldemort’s Death Eaters. The analysis is mainly restricted to Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, but there are a few examples from some of the other books in the Harry Potter series as well.
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The Awareness of Evil in the Works of J. D. SalingerHarp, James T. 08 1900 (has links)
The present study will discuss J. D. Salinger's alienated misfits in direct relation to the psychology of the gifted, creative individual. By analyzing Seymour, Holden and Franny as representatives of a specific intellectual type, this study will provide the reader with a fresh insight into J. D. Salinger's fictional world.
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In Defense of Evil Stories: A Study in the Ethics of AuditionMinto, Robert Michael David January 2018 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Jorge L.A. Garcia / When Odysseus sets sail from Circe’s island, she advises him to stop up his ears and eyes when he passes the Sirens or he will suffer terrible consequences. He makes his crew do it, but keeps his own senses clear, asking only to be tied to the mast so he cannot act on any bewitchments. This story could almost be an allegory about the moral danger of art. In this dissertation, I defend a small part of what I take to be the Odyssean thesis: that art is worth the danger it represents, and, specifically, that what I call "evil stories" are worth the danger they represent. The phrase "evil stories" is a shorthand, for me, for the longer phrase "stories which require us, in order to understand them, to imaginatively simulate the point of view of characters who commit acts of great harm for sadistic, malicious, or defiant reasons." I argue that auditing “evil stories” is not, for most people, and as part of a balanced imaginative diet, so morally dangerous that they ought to be avoided; moreover, I argue that it can be morally opportune to audit them and, in some special cases, morally obligatory. My strategy to defend this thesis is two part. First, I formulate and respond to what I take to be the most serious reasons to suspect that auditing evil stories is too morally dangerous. Those reasons include: the idea that auditing evil stories is itself an immoral action (chapter 3); the idea that it is a virtue to be unable to perform the mental operations involved in adequately auditing evil stories (chapter 4); the idea that understanding evil actions or characters is tantamount to condoning them (chapter 5); and the idea that being fascinated by evil undercuts one's standing to condemn it (chapter 6). Second, I venture several tentative arguments in support of the idea that evil stories can actually provide opportunities for moral growth and education: the idea that evil stories provoke unique and valuable kinds of moral reflection and that we can sometimes be obligated to audit them (chapter 7); and the idea that auditing evil stories is uniquely revelatory of some kind of moral truth (chapter 8). In the course of all this rebutting and reason giving, I propose a way of thinking about the ethics of audition in general which I call "role-centered response moralism," which develops obliquely across the subsections of various chapters. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Philosophy.
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An Analysis Of The Concepts Of Good And Evil In Henry JamesKeskin, Hatice 01 January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
The aim of this thesis is to analyse the concepts of good and evil in Henry James&rsquo / s two novels, The Wings of the Dove and The Golden Bowl. The main argument, which is supported with evidence from the novels and several articles and books, is that the conceps of good and evil permeate the novels, that Henry James&rsquo / s use of symbolism and imagery reinforces the illustration of these concepts, that the contextual understanding of these terms cannot be separated from the environmental, financial and contextual factors that influence the characters&rsquo / responses to the world outside themselves and that human relations and the characters&rsquo / relatedness to the world outside themselves constitute the point where good and evil reside.
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Atheism the great suppression /Hunt, Tony L. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Lancaster Bible College, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 57-59).
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The God beyond belief in defence of William Rowe's evidential argument from evil /Trakakis, Nick. January 1900 (has links)
Revised thesis (doctoral)--Monash University, Australia, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 347-367) and index.
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A genealogy of absence & evil tracing the nation's borders with Captain America /Steinmetz, Christian J. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2008. / Title from file title page. Mary E. Stuckey, committee chair; Greg Smith, Ted Friedman, committee members. Electronic text (220 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed Sept. 19, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 213-220).
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