MandM header image 5

Entries Tagged as 'David Brink'

Brink on Dialectical Equilibrium

February 5th, 2009 2 Comments

In my last two posts, I have criticised David Brink’s appeal to scripture in order to argue against the appeal to divine commands in ethics. Brink anticpates the kind of argument I have offered and states, A common theistic response to these interpretative puzzles is to endorse the interpretation of tradition and scripture that yields […]

Tags:   · · · ·

Capital Punishment in the Old Testament: 2

January 27th, 2009 20 Comments

In Capital Punishment in the Old Testament: 1 I suggested that the capital sanctions found in The Torah in most cases were not intended to be carried out, that instead there operated an implicit assumption that a person who committed a serious crime had forfeited their life and hence was to pay a ransom as […]

Tags:   · · · · · · ·

Capital Punishment in the Old Testament: 1

January 25th, 2009 9 Comments

In “The Autonomy of Ethics,” David Brink writes that a literal reading of the Old Testament, [Y]ields problematic moral claims, such as Deuteronomy’s claims that parents can and should stone to death rebellious children (21:18-21) and that the community can and should stone to death any wife whose husband discovers that she was not a […]

Tags:   · · · · ·