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    Rejecting God in VanArragon's broad sense requires neithe... — Carmelics
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    Home/Afterlife & Death
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    Supports→Persistent sinning without end would never result in anything like the traditional hell (whether understood as a lake of fire, the outer darkness, or any other condition revealing the full horror of separation from God).

    Rejecting God in VanArragon's broad sense requires neither an awareness of God nor a conscious decision to embrace a life apart from God.

    Afterlife & DeathEternal Conscious Torment
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    Afterlife & DeathEternal Conscious Torment

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    Given VanArragon's understanding of libertarian freedom, continuing to sin forev...Persistent sinning without end would never result in anything like the tradition...VanArragon defines 'rejecting God' so broadly that any sin for which one is mora...

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    God's deepest love for a person does not always require identifying wi...78%Objective meaning in life does not require immortality75%If S is fully informed and chooses a life apart from God, then S's cho...74%Well-being does not completely depend on the goods of this life.73%

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    SEP: heaven-hell
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    So the idea of irreparable harm—that is, of harm that not even omnipotence could ever repair—is critical at this point. It is most relevant, perhaps, in cases where someone imagines sinners freely choosing annihilation (Kvanvig), or imagines them freely making a decisive and irreversible choice of evil (Walls), or imagines them freely locking the gates of hell from the inside (C. S. Lewis). But proponents of the so-called escapism understanding of hell can plausibly counter that hell is not necessarily an instance of such irreparable harm, and Raymond VanArragon in particular raises the possib...

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