Read:
- Polytheism:
- Fairbanks, A. (1898). Literary Influence in the Development of Greek Religion. The Biblical World,11(5), 294-305. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3137300
- Read the entire Polytheism and Monotheism Lecture at Gifford Lectures: https://www.giffordlectures.org/books/attributes-god/iii-polytheism-and-monotheism
- Humanism:
- Watch Professor of Sociology Frank Furedi’s 18-minute lecture on Humanism.: Furedi, F. (2013). Alternative lectures: What is Humanism (Part 1). [Video File]
- Watch his 19-minute follow-up as well. Furedi, F. (2013). What is humanism? Part 2. [Video File]
- A collection of short definitions of Humanism can be found at https://americanhumanist.org/what-is-humanism/definition-of-humanism/ : read through these and prepare to share your thoughts.
- The problem of Evil and Suffering to Religion:
- Read the entire entry (all 11 sub-sections) from the IEP entry for the “Logical Problem of Evil” available at http://www.iep.utm.edu/evil-log/
For the paper:
- Pick one of the three following and present a Research Paper on them, their views, and their specific Philosophical underpinnings to religion using the rubric below.
- Please look briefly at each and pick the one that will give you the most rewarding experience to learn more about.
- Free Will vs. Omnipotence
- How can we have Free Will if God knows everything that has or will happen, and therefore it has already happened or couldn’t be known?
- Evil and Suffering
- How does a purely good God allow evil to happen to good people?
- Thomas Paine and God
- Although a humanist, Paine believed in God and the afterlife. Explain his logic and offer your own.
In the paper, identify your topic of choice in the title and opening sentences.
From there:
- Describe the challenge through the open-minded lens of philosophical inquiry
- Give several examples of the arguments for and against the prevailing logic, for example:
- For Free Will, for example, you may wish to discuss the ramifications of Free Will vs. a God who knows everything
- For Evil and Suffering, you may want to explore why evil is necessary or could be argued to be so
- For Thomas Paine, you may want to discuss how a humanist could also believe in a God and still be an actual humanist
- Why is it still something modern students of philosophy are compelled to study? Why is this topic still important to the philosophy or religion?
Be sure to use in-text citation and provide references for your sources, including textbooks.