This book investigates the compatibility between the doctrine of divine simplicity (DDS, hereafter) and divine free action primarily in the works of Avicenna and Anselm with an analytical approach.  The book has three main objectives: (1) to thoroughly analyse both philosophers’ views on DDS, divine free will, and their compatibility; (2) to put them into the context of the contemporary discourse of the philosophy of religion, by investigating whether it is possible to have freedom without the ability to do otherwise (as proposed by both philosophers for divine free will) with a reference to the prominent contemporary discussions initiated by Harry Frankfurt’s counterexamples; and (3) to show the plausibility of the agent-causal view for divine freedom (as defended by Anselm and Avicenna) by briefly sketching an alternative account based on Anselmian intuitions (the meta-awareness account) which can avoid the reasons-explanation objection and the luck objection against thelibertarian agent-causal view.
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This book investigates the compatibility between the doctrine of divine simplicity (DDS, hereafter) and divine free action primarily in the works of Avicenna and Anselm with an analytical approach.
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Avicenna and Anselm on God and Divine Simplicity.- Chapter 3: Avicenna’s Account of Free Will and Divine Freedom.- Chapter 4: Anselm’s Account of Free Will and Divine Freedom.- Chapter 5:  Divine Simplicity and Divine Freedom.- Chapter 6: Divine Freedom, Agent-Causal Power, and Reasons-Explanation.- Chapter 7: Conclusion.
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This book investigates the compatibility between the doctrine of divine simplicity (DDS, hereafter) and divine free action primarily in the works of Avicenna and Anselm with an analytical approach.  The book has three main objectives: (1) to thoroughly analyse both philosophers’ views on DDS, divine free will, and their compatibility; (2) to put them into the context of the contemporary discourse of the philosophy of religion, by investigating whether it is possible to have freedom without the ability to do otherwise (as proposed by both philosophers for divine free will) with a reference to the prominent contemporary discussions initiated by Harry Frankfurt’s counterexamples; and (3) to show the plausibility of the agent-causal view for divine freedom (as defended by Anselm and Avicenna) by briefly sketching an alternative account based on Anselmian intuitions (the meta-awareness account) which can avoid the reasons-explanation objection and the luck objection againstthe libertarian agent-causal view.  Ayşenur Ünügür-Tabur is a Postdoctoral Researcher at Augsburg University, Germany.
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Analyses divine simplicity and freedom in Avicenna and Anselm In contrast to Avicenna and Anselm, it rejects the possibility of divine freedom without God’s ability to do otherwise Offers new insights into the agent-causal libertarian view
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783031401633
Publisert
2024-09-21
Utgiver
Vendor
Palgrave Macmillan
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Om bidragsyterne

Ayşenur Ünügür-Tabur is a Postdoctoral Researcher at Augsburg University, Germany.