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Good God: The Theistic Foundations of Morality is unavailable, but you can change that!

This book aims to reinvigorate discussions of moral arguments for God's existence. To open this debate, Baggett and Walls argue that God's love and moral goodness are perfect, without defect, necessary, and recognizable. After integrating insights from the literature of both moral apologetics and theistic ethics, they defend theistic ethics against a variety of objections and, in so doing,...

be asked, and answering it requires that we be attentive to intimations of something more. Lewis takes the moral law within us, pressing on us to behave in certain ways, as just such a clue to deeper reality. We know about this law by experiencing its pull on us from the inside, which gives us reason to think of it as a hint of something more, an intimation of something beyond the universe. In the only place to look for evidence of something transcendent, we find it.[12] The source of this moral
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