Process theism: Does a persuasive God coerce?

Southern Journal of Philosophy 17 (1):133-143 (1979)
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Abstract

A fundamental tenet of the process philosophy founded by alfred north whitehead and charles hartshorne is that god's causal agency in the world is solely "persuasive," in contradistinction to much of traditional christian theism which portrays a more "coercive" god. The article, However, Seeks to show that hartshorne's God would appear to be somewhat coercive, E.G., In the imposition of the natural laws which are the limits to creaturely freedom and in the "luring" of creaturely actualizations of novel possibilities within those limits. Divine coercion seems to be both a fact and a necessity in hartshorne's metaphysics, Despite his explicit denials

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An aesthetic solution to the problem of evil.Barry L. Whitney - 1994 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 35 (1):21 - 37.

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