Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/001746253/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 20 of
20
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b2503888.
- catalog created "1974.".
- catalog date "1974".
- catalog date "1974.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1974.".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p. [129]-131.".
- catalog description "I. The problem stated: The need for a solution -- On the need for solutions to the problem of evil -- II. Evils: Past, present and future -- III. Ethical presuppositions of the problem of evil -- The theistic theory -- Subjectivist, non-cognitivist theories -- Other attitude theories -- The privation account of evil -- Assessing the privation theory -- Evil as unreal -- Conclusion -- IV. The nature and attributes of God -- God's attributes as literally ascribed -- Non-literal accounts of God's attributes -- God as a person: His personal traits -- V. God as finite and imperfect: Worshipworthiness -- God as finite in power -- An omnipotent God who is morally imperfect -- A God imperfect both in power and goodness -- The worshpworthiness of an omnipotent, omniscient, good God -- VI. Must a world created by an all-perfect being be wholly free of evil? -- VII. The best of all possible worlds -- VIII. The world as good over-all -- Section A: Solutions to the problem posed by physical evil -- Section B: Moral evil.".
- catalog extent "viii, 132 p.".
- catalog identifier "9024716047".
- catalog issued "1974".
- catalog issued "1974.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "The Hague, Nijhoff,".
- catalog subject "214".
- catalog subject "BJ1401 .M28".
- catalog subject "Good and evil.".
- catalog subject "Theodicy.".
- catalog tableOfContents "I. The problem stated: The need for a solution -- On the need for solutions to the problem of evil -- II. Evils: Past, present and future -- III. Ethical presuppositions of the problem of evil -- The theistic theory -- Subjectivist, non-cognitivist theories -- Other attitude theories -- The privation account of evil -- Assessing the privation theory -- Evil as unreal -- Conclusion -- IV. The nature and attributes of God -- God's attributes as literally ascribed -- Non-literal accounts of God's attributes -- God as a person: His personal traits -- V. God as finite and imperfect: Worshipworthiness -- God as finite in power -- An omnipotent God who is morally imperfect -- A God imperfect both in power and goodness -- The worshpworthiness of an omnipotent, omniscient, good God -- VI. Must a world created by an all-perfect being be wholly free of evil? -- VII. The best of all possible worlds -- VIII. The world as good over-all -- Section A: Solutions to the problem posed by physical evil -- Section B: Moral evil.".
- catalog title "God and evil. By H. J. McCloskey.".
- catalog type "text".