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Protestant principle

theology

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Tillich’s view of justification

  • In Paul Tillich: Development of his philosophy

    …which he called the “Protestant principle,” could be given a far wider scope than previously had been thought. Not limited to the classical religious question of how sinful people can be acceptable to a holy God, it could be understood to encompass a person’s intellectual life as well and…

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compatibilism, Thesis that free will, in the sense required for moral responsibility, is consistent with universal causal determinism. It is important to distinguish the question of the logical consistency of belief in universal causal determinism with belief in free will from the question whether the thesis of free will (or that of causal determinism) is true. Compatibilists need not assert (though many have) the reality both of free will and of causal determinism. Among incompatibilists, some maintain the existence of free will and accordingly deny universal causal determinism, while others uphold universal causal determinism and deny the existence of free will.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Brian Duignan.