The Problem of Evil. Bible and Philosophy FIL-SM-ENG>mono01L
1. The Bible as a Source of Philosophical thinking
2. Manichaeism and the privative theory of evil, part 1
3. Manichaeism and the privative theory of evil, part 2
4. The logical problem of evil and the defense of free will
5. The evident problem of evil and skeptical theism
6. Anti-theodicy
7. Original sin – exegetical interpretation
8. Original sin - philosophical interpretations
9. Original sin - philosophical interpretations
10. The Book of Job – exegetical interpretation
11. The Book of Job - philosophical interpretations
12. The Book of Job - philosophical interpretations
13. The Incarnation of Christ and salvation from evil - theological interpretation
14. The Incarnation of Christ and salvation from evil - philosophical interpretations
Koordynatorzy przedmiotu
Efekty kształcenia
1. The student knows the most important positions in the discussion on the problem of evil
2. The student has knowledge of the book of Genesis and the book of Job in the context of the issue of evil
3. The student has knowledge about the Christian concept of salvation
4. The student is able to formulate an independent position within theodicy
Kryteria oceniania
Egzamin ustny na podstawie wykładu i bibliografii
Literatura
John Bergsma and Brant Pitre, A Catholic Introduction to the Bible, Volume 1, Ignatius Press, San Francisco 2018, p. 64-183 (Book of Genesis), p. 561-587 (Book of Job)
Chad Meister, Evil. A Guide for the Perplexed, Bloomsbury Academic 2018
Gerard O'Collins, Jesus our Redeemer. A Christian Approach to Salvation, Oxford University Press 2007
Michael L. Peterson, Monotheism, Suffering and Evil, Cambridge University Press 2022
Więcej informacji
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