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ONLINE Gastvortrag Robert Hartman (Tulane Univ.): „If Vicious Character Constitutes Hell's Punishment and Explains Its Fixity, then Probably All Will Be Saved”

ONLINE Gastvortrag Robert Hartman (Tulane Univ.): „If Vicious Character Constitutes Hell's Punishment and Explains Its Fixity, then Probably All Will Be Saved”

Mittwoch, 24. November 2021, 18.00 Uhr

ONLINE Gastvortrag Robert Hartman (Tulane University): „If Vicious Character Constitutes Hell's Punishment and Explains Its Fixity, then Probably All Will Be Saved” [Plakat]

Teilnahme unter folgendem Link

According to one prominent view, the punishment of hell is constituted by the natural consequences of the damned person’s vicious character; and the damned suffer forever, because they have freely fixed their character in a way that makes repentance psychologically impossible. So, even though God continues to desire reconciliation with persons in hell, they do not all-things-considered want reconciliation with God. But this explanation of hell’s finality is implausible. Since God enables human free choice to accept God’s invitation to salvation in their pre-mortem lives, God would re-enable that ability to accept freely God’s invitation to salvation in their post-mortem lives. That is, God would make direct or indirect alterations in the character of damned persons and give them new motivational reasons that re-enable their freedom to repent. But then, it is probable all damned persons will be saved eventually in part because there is a potential infinity of opportunities for each person to choose freely to repent. Thus, if such views about the nature of hell and divine love are correct, probably all will be saved.

Robert J. Hartman works mainly in normative ethics, metaphysics, and philosophical theology. He is a visiting assistant professor of philosophy at Tulane University, New Orleans. Previously, he was a visiting research professor and faculty fellow with the Center for Ethics and Public Affairs in the Murphy Institute at Tulane University; he also held postdoctoral research fellowships at Stockholm University and the University of Gothenburg. He is the author of In Defense of Moral Luck (Routledge 2017) and co-editor of The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy and Psychology of Luck (Routledge 2019). Currently, he is writing a monograph titled Character and Free Will as well as a series of papers that apply its insights to theological puzzles about gratitude, heaven, purgatory, and hell.

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