Divine omniscience and voluntary action
Philosophical Review 74 (1):27-46 (1965)
| Abstract | This article has no associated abstract. (fix it) | |||||||||
| Keywords | No keywords specified (fix it) | |||||||||
| Categories | ||||||||||
| Options |
|
|||||||||
| PhilPapers Archive |
Upload a copy of this paper Check publisher's policy on self-archival Papers currently archived: 5,679 |
| External links |
|
| Through your library | Configure |
Jason A. Beyer (2004). A Physicalist Rejoinder to Some Problems with Omniscience; or, How God Could Know What We Know. Sophia 43 (2).
Sabine Maasen, Wolfgang Prinz & Gerhard Roth (eds.) (2003). Voluntary Action: Brains, Minds, and Sociality. Oxford University Press.
Laura L. Garcia (1993). Timelessness, Omniscience, and Tenses. Journal of Philosophical Research 18:65-82.
Conor McHugh (forthcoming). Judging as a Non-Voluntary Action. Philosophical Studies.
William Lane Craig (2000). Omniscience, Tensed Facts and Divine Eternity. Faith and Philosophy 17 (2):227--228.
Tomis Kapitan (1991). Agency and Omniscience. Religious Studies 27 (1):105-120.
Jill Graper Hernandez (2005). Divine Omniscience and Human Evil: Interpreting Leibniz Without Middle Knowledge. Philosophy and Theology 17 (1/2):107-120.
Neal Tognazzini, Patrick Todd & John Martin Fischer (2011). Engaging with Pike: God, Freedom, and Time. Philosophical Papers 38 (2):247-270.
Robert Segal (1982). Pike on Divine Omniscience and Voluntary Action. The New Scholasticism 56 (3):329-339.
Thomas Metcalf (2004). Omniscience and Maximal Power. Religious Studies 40 (3):289-306.
Monthly downloads |
Added to index2009-01-28Total downloads301 ( #436 of 549,088 )Recent downloads (6 months)14 ( #4,559 of 549,088 )How can I increase my downloads? |

