Saturday, 04 July 2009

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    A Rave Concerning Good, Evil, and Freedom: Part the Sixteenth

    O Felix Culpa: A Response

    Last year, in the pages of journal Faith and Philosophy, (April 2008, vol 25, no. 2, pp. 123-140) Marilyn McCord Adams has leveled a series of criticism on Plantinga's latest answer to the problem of evil. In passing I should mentioned that Adams sees Plantinga moving from a simple defense (what van Inwagen calls a Just-so Story) to a theodicy (or an explanation for why God should permit evil). Rightly or wrongly, I'm still treating Plantinga's latest offering as a defense that serves as only a possible account, but an account that draws on upon a specific Christian tradition that was not itself designed as an explanation to a philosophic problem but instead was directed to God in praise for what was seen as the wonder of his grace.

    Allow me to reflect on only four of Adam's criticisms. Let me also say that the relative weight I give these are my own.

    • Despite Plantinga's attempt to distance himself, his analysis appears to have God suffering from Munchausen by Proxy syndrome.
    • As Plantinga presents the felix culpa defense, it would seem that we not only earned the horrors we inflict on each other, but need them for our own good.
    • Plantinga's new defense suffers from same critical problem as the free will defense, it treats only the good of world as a whole and not the good for any given individual.
    • Plantinga does not give enough attention to the difference between the Atonement and the Incarnation

    Munchausen syndrome is where one places oneself in grave or extravagant situations for the sole purpose of winning glory by overcoming them—winning glory or attention for their own sake. Munchausen by Proxy is placing someone else in such a situations for the purpose of getting attention for oneself. In the case of God, this would be his showing the depth of divine love placing us in grave danger and then rescuing us by extravagant means. Plantinga addressed this in his original article. Plantinga stated that God doesn't owe us anything either now and certainly not before creating us. Moreover, God doesn't need our praise or gratitude and so would not be motivated to act to win it. Adams would agree with this, but then comes back and asks who is this extravagance for.1

    This leads to the next two criticisms. Lets say that God allowed us to fall for our sakes. In this case the horrors we endure are for our own good and we are such creatures who are so constituted so as to require the horrors we visit upon ourselves. Now Plantinga could affirm that now being in a world plagued with evil, some what we suffer may well be for our good as a way to ween ourselves from the passing nature of the world and some evils are suffered because good people oppose evil and pay the consequence. Yet these beg the question. This world has a perverse way inflicting evils indiscriminately on those who simply accept it for what it is, but takes pains to make life all the more miserable for those who oppose its order. Yet either these evils seem either not to serve any good or the good the serve is only a consequence of their initial existence.

    The reason for this is that Plantinga's argument depends on on any good for any given individual but that the Atonement in this argument functions as a great good in itself. The Atonement is a global good or a good that makes the world as a whole better, but does address individuals per se.

    The above two criticisms are a direct result of Adam's own take on the problem of evil and should one not accept her larger project, these arguments would not hold that much water. I hope to address this in more detail later, but right now I would like to pursue the forth criticism on this list. Plantinga does appear to treat the Atonement and the Incarnation as the same thing. Granted, that within Christian theology, given our sinful state, the two go hand-in-hand, but they are not the same thing. Unless the fall was necessary to some end in itself, one could have the great good of the Incarnation without the Atonement. If all the Atonement does is cancel out the Fall, then the great good of the Incarnation without either Fall or Atonement would make for a world a good as this one which has both the Fall and its canceling Atonement.

    Here I dare say the fault lies not with the sentimentO felix culpa quae talem et tantum meruit habere redemptorem,” but that Plantinga's argument hasn't fully captured the notion that this fall and this redemption will lead to better things for us (as opposed to simply a better balance of good and evil in the world in general) than had neither occurred.



    1I should note that part of Adam's larger project is explanations for evil are ultimately counterproductive (for reasons that I may get to later). What Adams offers from the Christian tradition instead is that in Christ God did not simply compensate for evil but overcame it, making it null and void.

Comments (3)

  • bryangoodrich

    You know when I first started looking at some of your Raves, I think it was just below ten. Nevertheless, I feel left behind, and in large part since I haven't touched much of the literature in this area (my religious studies focused on comparative religion and anthropology and Eastern philosophical ideas, more than Western religious analysis). You should try and do snippet synopses here and there, something that people can fall back on for ideas, either of your own writing or online links. There are pieces to your raves that now span quite a few blogs that I just don't have the time to review to see the interconnections and development of these ideas concerning good and evil, which I find to be taken in an interesting light by your blogs. 

  • herzog3000

    Oooo! Finally a Christian perspective that goes beyond infantile Sunday school level.


    If you have attended your church for more than ten years and don't know any formal theology, Church history, philosophy of religion or textual criticism something is desperately wrong. The Christian church by and large is dead. 97% of those pew warmers have never even heard of Plantinga.


    @bryangoodrich - Thanks for the recommendation.

  • bryangoodrich

    @herzog3000 - Figured some of my readers could appreciate this man's work. 

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