HENRI BLOCHER* translated by DUSTIN E. ANDERSON, assisted by ROGER T. BECKWITH with footnotes translated by GERALD BRAY In naïve experience, evil is perceived as the unjustifiable reality, provoking indignation and entailing shame. How can it be understood? Pagan optimism, dualism, and pessimism slide around the difficulty, partially veiling experience and attempting to take the evil out of evil: the first, by minimizing
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