@book{Pihlström2020, abstract = {As a traditional theological issue and in its broader secular varieties, theodicy remains a problem in the philosophy of religion. In this remarkable book, Sami Pihlström provides a novel critical reassessment of the theodicy discourse addressing the problem of evil and suffering. He develops and defends an antitheodicist view, arguing that theodicies seeking to render apparently meaningless suffering meaningful or justified from a ‘God’s-Eye-View’ ultimately rely on metaphysical realism failing to recognize the individual perspective of the sufferer. Pihlström thus shows that a pragmatist approach to the realism issue in the philosophy of religion is a vital starting point for a re-evaluation of the problem of theodicy. With its strong positions and precise arguments, the volume provides a new approach which is likely to stimulate discussion in the wider academic world of philosophy of religion.Sami Pihlström is professor of philosophy of religion at the University of Helsinki. He has published widely on, e.g., the pragmatist tradition, the problem of realism, and the philosophy of religion. "With this fresh and highly stimulating book on pragmatism, realism and antitheodicy, Sami Pihlström consolidates his most important thinking to-date into one coherent account. While demonstrating how his take on pragmatism can have bearing on the debate on realism and anti-realism, fact and value, truth and pluralism, Pihlström also brings his position to bear on the failures of theodicy. Bringing added richness to the pragmatist tradition, Pihlström fruitfully draws on Kant’s transcendentalism, Levinas’ alterity, along with Wittgenstein’s view of language and its limits. Rich, lucidly written and carefully argued, this book deserves a broad readership." - Professor Espen Dahl, University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway}, address = {Helsinki}, author = {Pihlström, Sami}, doi = {10.33134/HUP-2}, isbn = {978-952-369-004-2, 978-952-369-005-9, 978-952-369-006-6, 978-952-369-007-3}, keyword = {suffering, evil, antitheodicy / antitheodicies, theodicy / theodicies, realism, pragmatism}, month = {Feb}, pages = {223}, publisher = {Helsinki University Press}, subtitle = {On Viewing the World by Acknowledging the Other}, title = {Pragmatic Realism, Religious Truth, and Antitheodicy}, year = {2020} }