John Hick on "The Problem of Evil" Analytical Essay by Top Papers
John Hick on "The Problem of Evil"
An analysis of John Hick's views in "The Problem of Evil".
# 142931
| 1,500 words
| 5 sources
| MLA
| 2009
|

Published
on Dec 01, 2009
in
Philosophy
(Religion)
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Description:
The paper looks at how in his essay "The Problem of Evil", John Hick evaluates common objections to the belief that the perceived existence of God consequently implicates the simultaneous presence of evil in the world. The paper discusses how Hick begins his argument by offering his reader a seemingly intractable dilemma, as he suggests that if God was truly a loving individual, He must wish to eradicate all forms of evil if He is truly an all powerful being. The paper describes how he analyzes this issue from three separate perspectives, citing views from the Boston Personalist School, the theologian Augustine and that of contemporary Christian Science.
From the Paper:
"In his essay "The Problem of Evil", John Hick evaluates common objections to the belief that the perceived existence of God consequently implicates the simultaneous presence of evil in the world. Hick begins his argument by offering his reader a seemingly intractable dilemma, as he suggests that if God was truly a loving individual, He must wish to eradicate all..."Cite this Analytical Essay:
APA Format
John Hick on "The Problem of Evil" (2009, December 01)
Retrieved September 21, 2023, from https://www.academon.com/analytical-essay/john-hick-on-the-problem-of-evil-142931/
MLA Format
"John Hick on "The Problem of Evil"" 01 December 2009.
Web. 21 September. 2023. <https://www.academon.com/analytical-essay/john-hick-on-the-problem-of-evil-142931/>