I subscribe to the Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. (Free by email.) That
means that most days I get one or often two reviews of philosophical books.
I subscribe because I find the issues fascinating -- even though I also
often find them not really worth the time I spend on them. Today's two
reviews are of M. V. Dougherty,  <goog_42276252>*Moral Dilemmas in Medieval
Thought: From Gratian to Aquinas <http://ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=24314> *
and Eleonore Stump,  <goog_42276257>*Wandering in Darkness: Narrative and
the Problem of Suffering <http://ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=24313>**.*

I'm typically less interested in historical philosophy. I don't really care
much about medieval moral dilemmas. The second book sounded more
interesting. It is described by the reviewer as follows.

The goal of the book is to solve the evidential problem of suffering (or, to
be more precise, the evidential problem of mentally fully functional adult
human suffering). ...

In Stump's opinion, all that is required for such a solution is a successful
defense. A defense, as she understands it, is an attempt to describe
an*epistemically
possible* world exhibiting the same pattern of suffering that we find in the
actual world in spite of the fact that an omnipotent, omniscient, and
perfectly good God exists.

And, if you are interested, here is Stump's defense.

(1) God loves me and so desires to be united in love with me. (2) Such union
is impossible even for God in my current psychically fragmented condition.
To make union possible, I need to be internally integrated around the good
and (3) to achieve such integration, I need to undergo a process of
justification and sanctification. Unfortunately, (4) the best means
available to God to promote that process is to cause or allow me to suffer.
So ironically, God's love for me ultimately leads to God's desiring (in his
consequent will) that I suffer. Stump has much to say about each of these
steps.


I'm probably one of the least religious people in the world. But I know a
number of sincerely religious people and am always interested in how
they think. This, of course, is an example. Not only that, it is an example
of how philosophers of religion think and how they spend their time when
doing professional work.

Why am I posting this? Mainly as a continuation of the discussion of
what philosophers do. What do I think about it? Well, I find that I see a
lot of it as a waste of time and effort. Intelligent people are spending
their time on issues that (in my opinion) don't need their attention.  On
the other hand, lots of people spend their time on things that I find
not particularly worthwhile.

What I admire about philosophers, though, is that almost universally they
are intellectually honest. They don't demagogue; they don't (intentionally)
try to fool their readers with logically fallacious arguments. They are
almost always open to hearing the other side of whatever they write about.
In fact, much philosophical writing is an explicit attempt to raise opposing
issues in advance and then respond to them seriously.

For the most part I think this is true of most--although certainly not
all--academics. (Although read Paul Krugman about
the intellectual dishonesty of certain academic economists.) But philosophy
as a discipline must for its own self-preservation have a commitment to
intellectual honesty, no matter what subject matter is under discussion. If
anything philosophy is the discipline of intellectual honesty and for that
reason deserves respect.


*-- Russ Abbott*
*_____________________________________________*
***  Professor, Computer Science*
*  California State University, Los Angeles*

*  Google voice: 747-*999-5105
*  blog: *http://russabbott.blogspot.com/
  vita:  http://sites.google.com/site/russabbott/
*_____________________________________________*
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