The problem of arbitrary requirements: an Abrahamic perspective

International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 89 (3):221-242 (2020)
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Abstract

Some religious requirements seem genuinely arbitrary in the sense that there seem to be no sufficient explanation of why those requirements with those contents should pertain. This paper aims to understand exactly what it might mean for a religious requirement to be genuinely arbitrary and to discern whether and how a religious practitioner could ever be rational in obeying such a requirement. We lay out four accounts of what such arbitrariness could consist in, and show how each account provides a different sort of baseline for understanding how obedience to arbitrary requirements could, in principle, be rational.

Author Profiles

Amir Saemi
University of California at Santa Barbara (PhD)
Marilie Coetsee
Rutgers - New Brunswick
Sara Aronowitz
University of Toronto, St. George Campus

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