The full essay is at "All of Me."
Saturday, February 21, 2026
All of Me
The full essay is at "All of Me."
Thursday, February 19, 2026
The Mephisto Waltz
In a retelling of the proverbial Faustian deal with the devil, The Mephisto Waltz (1971) plays out with the deal paying off, as Duncan Ely is able to live on in the body of Myles Clarkson. It doesn’t hurt that Ely is a master pianist and Clarkson has long, spry fingers (and that he has a beautiful wife, Paula). Even so, both Paula and the Clarkson’s daughter stand in the way of Duncan being able to get back to his own wife, and the film ends with Paula making her own deal with the devil so she can live on even though Duncan (and his wife) have already set about her demise. Because Duncan’s “after-life” transition is successful and even Paula, who has been opposing Duncan’s possession of Myles, ends up turning to the devil, the lesson of the film, Faust (1926) is effectively debunked. Besides The Mephisto Waltz, that God does not smite every case of injustice in the world—the genocide being perpetrated by Israel in the 2020s being a vivid and blatant example—may even further instigate interest in Faustian deals with the devil, even though that entity is known to be deceiver and thus not to be trusted. The allure of selfish gain can be worthwhile nonetheless for some people. For Duncan Ely, being able to go on living and gain even more fame as a performing pianist is worth the gamble, and it pays off. The medium of film is an excellent means of presenting the religious level, which is distinct yet interacts with the ordinary world that anchors the film.
The full essay is at "The Mephisto Waltz."
Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist
Decades before dying while
doing battle with the demon possessing Regan NacNeil in The Exorcist (1973),
Rev. Lankester Merrin successfully extracts the same demon from a young man in
Kenya. An African chief (or medicine man) tells Merrin at the end of Dominion:
The Prequel to the Exorcist (2005) that he has made a rather bad
enemy of the demon, which was not done with the priest. We know from The
Exorcist that the demon will eventually kill the priest, but that is by no
means the final word on a distinctively religious battle because in that
domain, the human soul is eternal rather than necessarily tethered to a
corporeal body. It is important, moreover, not to reduce religion to one of its
aspects, or, even worse, to the stuff of any other domain, including the supernatural.
Dominion reduces Christianity to one belief-claim and relies on
supernaturalism to validate the religious phenomena in the film.
The full essay is at "Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist."
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Confucius on the Ethics of Religious Knowledge
A contemporary scholar of Chinese
philosophy wrote, “myths often contain an element of historical truth, and what
passes for historical truth often has mythical elements.”[1]
By implication, not everything that seems to be historically valid in a
religious story is, for it is fair-game in that genre to assuage and even
invent “historical” events to make theological points. Lest it be thought that
histories are written objectively, it should not be forgotten that historical
accounts are written by human beings, and thus are subject to our limitations,
including bias. Nevertheless, religious stories, or myth, and historical
accounts are different genres of writing, and have very different purposes and criteria.
To conflate the two genres, or, moreover, any other domain with that of
religion, is to deny the uniqueness of religion (as well as that of other, even
related domains). Religion and ethics, for instance, are two, admittedly very
closely related, domains of human experience.
Ethics is the field concerned
with what a person should do, whereas religion goes beyond conduct to
include, and be based on, the experience of transcendence that goes beyond, or is
oriented to, beyondness. Religious mystics, such as Ramakrishna in the
1800s and Gertrude in a medieval monastery, would in all likelihood agree with
Pseudo-Dionysius’s claim that religion goes beyond the limits of human
cognition, perception, and sensibility (i.e., emotions). More precisely,
religion, while being in our world, transcends it and does so inherently.
Knowledge of the source, or infinite remainder, of religion inherently eludes
us finite, corporeal beings, whereas knowledge currently beyond our grasp in
domains such as politics, economics, the weather, and the other sciences can potentially
be known by us. This qualitative epistemological difference is just one way of
grasping why the domain of religion is unique, and thus warrants its own
criteria, rather than any overreaching from historians and scientists. To be
sure, the arrow goes both ways; distinctly religious criteria cannot legitimately
dominate in the fields of history and natural science. Such overreaching in
both directions has been the blight of religion especially in the last millennium
at least in Europe.
To be sure, certain other
domains are very closely related to that of religion. After all, five of the
Ten Commandments contain ethical content, albeit crucially of a divine command
rather than a human’s ethical theory. Recognizing that divine commands are not
bound in principle to our notions of conduct that is ethical (or unethical), as
Kierkegaard makes clear in Fear and Trembling in which Abraham’s
attempted religious sacrifice of Isaac trumps the ethical verdict of
attempted murder, it is legitimate to include religion in ethical analysis.
For example, whether knowledge
is of the transcendent sort or merely potential, it is important not to
overreach in what we think we know. This vice may be called epistemological
arrogance. In fact, to Confucius, “knowledge (zhi) is to know what one
knows and doesn’t know (2.17, 19.5). Such knowledge, in turn, enables one to
learn (xue) what one doesn’t know.”[2]
The arrogance in thinking one knows more than one does diminishes the knowledge
that a person can potentially acquire. Hence, Confucius states in Analects 9.8,
“The Master said, ‘Do I possess an all-knowing cognizance? I do not. If a
simple fellow asks me a question, my mind at first is a complete blank, and I
have to knock at both sides [of the question] until everything has been considered
[and some clarity begins to emerge].’”[3]
That is, Confucius (Kongzi) “did not think that he must be right; he was not
obdurate; he was not self-centered.”[4]
Intellectual humility is like a cup viewing itself as empty and thus as able to
be filled; additional knowledge must overflow from an already-full cup.
Such humility is especially
valuable when it is applied to knowledge in the religious domain, for to lapse
there into overreaching as if a person could be omniscient (i.e., all-knowing),
is to engage in self-idolatry. This is not so regarding knowledge in other
domains. Therefore, the method that Confucius urges for earthly knowledge in
those other domains pertains all the more when the human mind enters the domain
of religion. Incidentally, to project self-idolatry onto intellectual arrogance
in another domain is an example of religious criteria (and meaning) overreaching
at the expense of the native criteria (and meaning) of the other domains.
I contend that with respect to
religion, given the mind’s proclivity to overreach epistemologically (i.e.,
thinking one knows more than one does in a certain subject), it is prudent to
be ever vigilant in distinguishing religious
belief, which is compatible with faith, from knowledge of divine things, which excludes
faith and is ultimately self-contradictory because the essence of divinity is
inherently beyond the limits of human cognition, perception, and emotion. Analects
2.17 refers to a statement ostensibly made by Confucius himself: “The
Master said, ‘You [Zilu], do you know what I have been trying to teach you? To
say that you know something when you know it and to say that you do not know
something when you do not know it—this is true knowing[zhi].”[5]
To be able to say what one knows and admit what one does not (yet) know
is premised on knowing where the line between the two is. This in turn is
premised on valuing knowledge. In Analects 19.5, “Zixia said, ‘To be
aware each day of what you still don’t know and to remember after a month what
you were able to absorb—this is proof of your love for learning.’”[6]
A love of learning can be intuited by a person’s carefulness in making clear to
others the limits of one’s knowledge.
In the religious domain, all
that translates into resisting the temptation to presume to know not
only what God is in itself (i.e., the essence of divinity), but also what God
wants or wills and furthermore that God’s will must surely be behind some event
in the world. To know that God caused an earthquake, for instance, lies beyond
our ability to discern, and yet such overreaching has not been uncommon. To
know that it is God’s will that a close relative dies at a certain time is
similarly presumptuous, epistemologically, whereas to have faith, and
thus a belief, that the loved one is in a better place fits with the human
situs in the realm of religion. In stark contrast, to declare that the
person is in a better place is dogmatic, and may say more about the
psychology of the person making the statement than anything religious. Whereas a
person enunciating more about economics or politics than the person actually
knows is just pedantic, presuming to know that which lies beyond the limits of
human cognition, perspective, and emotions in principle is of a sort of
arrogance that is foisted by an utter self-contradiction: knowledge of that
which is inherently beyond the limits of human knowledge. In trying to be akin
to God, a human being flies too high and thus inevitably falls on one’s face. Humanity’s
grasp of what divinity actually is may be more misguided than we assume. How,
for example, is divine, theological love qualitatively different (i.e., unique)
from the garden-variety love evinced typically in our world? It is easy to draw
on psychology and metaphysics instead of looking below to a distinctly
theological sort of love. Augustine’s notion of caritas love in his Confessions
is soaked in emotion, and the Christian notion of divine agape love as
self-emptying love is typically thought of metaphysically rather than
distinctly theologically.
It is ironic that Confucius’s
epistemological ethic can be so useful in how a person can approach religion as
such. To be clear, in the Analects, Confucius is discussing knowledge
that a person can potentially have. Such knowledge is not of the transcendent;
in the religious domain, knowledge extends only so far and then belief must
take over. This does not mean that the method proposed by Confucius cannot be
used by people in discerning the limits of knowledge in matters of religion. The
human susceptibility to over-reach in such matters even though faith is tacitly
sacrificed in the process is so commonly exploited that more vigilance in
distinguishing what one knows from what one does not know is needed. Divine
revelation is by definition pristine, but it should not be forgotten that it
must go through our atmosphere—or as through a smoky, stained-glass window—to reach
us. Put another way, we are hardly pristine receptors, and yet we presume so to
be even as we implicitly import psychology and metaphysics in essentially
remaking divinity into something more familiar to the mind. David Hume’s The
Natural History of Religion gets at the anthropomorphism that the human
mind inevitably hangs on divine simplicity. For example, it is much more
difficult for us to grasp the Christian theological notion of the Logos than
its incarnation as a god-man because the latter is literally more familiar to
us than is God’s creative rationale in Creation. To transcend a familiar mask
of eternity—to use Joseph Campbell’s term—and be suspended in the mystery of
the transcendent that lies inherently beyond our reach (not to mention our human
form) is admittedly scary, but also so necessary to getting past religion in
human terms.[7]
2. Mary Sim, “Why Confucius’ Ethics is a Virtue Ethics,” The Routledge Companion to Virtue Ethics, ed.s Michael A. Slote and Lorraine Besser-Jones (New York: Routledge, 2015), 63-76, p. 70.
3. Confucius, The Analects, trans. Annping Chin (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 133.
4. Analects 9.4, in Confucius, The Analects, trans. Annping Chin (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 131.
5. Confucius, The Analects, trans. Annping Chin (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 20.
6. Ibid., p. 311.
7. This is essentially the thesis of my treatise, Godliness and Greed, which is published by Lexington Books. In my next book, God’s Gold, which unlike the first is written for a non-academic readership, I extend my thinking to how an anthropomorphic religion can be retained without the pitfalls of rendering the divine in so anthropomorphic terms.
Monday, February 2, 2026
Selfishness and Damnation on the Boston Subway
Imagine a crowded, standing-room-only
subway car during rush hour in Boston, Massachusetts. Even though many riders
are standing, a seated passenger keeps his backpack on the seat next to his own
seat. It would be difficult upon seeing such a blatant display of selfishness
not make certain assumptions about the man’s values and character. I did, twice
on Boston subway trains, as I stood looking at one young man, and then another
on another train about a month later who was doing the same thing. Because many
of the train operators in Boston ignore their training by slapping the brake
lever backwards all at once rather than gradually just before abruptly stopping
at a station-stop, standing can be perilous. Once I found myself running
through half of a trolley car to re-establish my balance because the driver had
applied the brakes too abruptly. The inconsiderateness
for the riders could easily be inferred, and from that, we could say that the reckless
employees suffered from the vice of selfishness. The same can be said of the
drivers’ supervisors, for whom the word accountability was not in the English
dictionary. With so much selfishness delimiting intending benefits to others
that are intended by one’s decisions and actions, moreover, a dysfunctional
organization and even an enabling society can be inferred. Some Christian
theologians have sought to relate the ethical vice of selfishness to the
religious sin of self-love, which as Pierre Nicole made clear in the
seventeenth century, is mutually exclusive with Christian love from compassion.
Even amid such clear relationships, the ethical and religious or theological
domains should not be fused as if the two domains were actually one. To view
selfishness self-love as containing both ethical and theological implications
and yet hold that the two domains are qualitatively different—each having its
own unique aspects—is the goal.
Selfishness is the manifestation
of self-love that is oriented teleologically to the person’s exclusive benefit
(i.e., private benefit). Although other people may benefit too, that is not
within the selfish person’s purview. Typically, selfishness cuts off benefits
going to other people and even a society as a whole. The vice is thus at odds
with compassion, which fuels benevolence, because even if other people benefit,
that byproduct is not motivated by a selfish person. Only such benefits as are
in the self-interest, and thus benefit,
of a selfish person fall within one’s intentionality. That is not compassion.
A continuum from the ethical
domain to that of religion may seem easily constructed; people of bad character
are likely to go to hell rather than heaven. If the kingdom of God preached by
Jesus in the Gospels is entered in this life by heartfelt acts of compassion to
one’s neighbors and detractors alike, then people who are only concerned about
themselves benefitting will not enter that spiritual state. As solid as this argument
is, it is also vital not to constrain God’s omniscience (knowledge) and
omnipotence (power) to fit within our ethical principles and theories. A figure
such as Abraham might take a decision that is the inverse of
compassionate—attempted murder of his only son—because God has decreed that
Abraham sacrifice Isaac. To be sure, Abraham’s intent to make the sacrifice
could hardly be considered selfish, but at the same time it is harmful rather
than compassionate. God’s knowledge and power so surpass our own that we should
take care in judging a selfish person soteriologically; salvation is up to God,
not us.
John Calvin, a Protestant
reformer in the sixteenth century, held that by absolute sovereignty, God has
predestined an elect who are saved. Although he viewed wealth as a sign of
God’s approval of the elect, it was not until the next century that Calvinists
considered industriousness to be a Christian virtue.[1]
Being rich could be an indication that, whether one is selfish or not, one is
already saved among God’s elect. All this contradicts Jesus’s statement in the
Gospels to the rich man that unless he gives up his fortune, he would not enter
the kingdom of God; it would be easier for a camel to get through the eye of a
needle. Furthermore, wealth as a sign of divine favor leaves out the divine
favor that could be supposed to be lavished on monks such as Cuthbert and
Godric of Finchale, who lived intentionally impoverished lives so to be
worthy of being saved. Wealth as a sign of divine favor also flies in the
face of the preachments of such religious notables as St. Francis of Assisi and
Luther, both of whom can be interpreted as attempting to apply brakes to the
emerging and maturating Christian pro-wealth paradigm in their respective
times.[2]
As a species of selfishness, greed—the desire for one’s own gain—is difficult
to reconcile with neighbor-love as compassionate benevolence. A greedy, selfish
person who claims to be saved by the blood of Christ on the Cross because Jesus
died for mankind as if the person’s debt to God is already paid flies in the
face of the claim made both by Paul and Augustine that God is love. To be in
union with God thus requires that a person loves, and selflessly (agape) at
that. In short, free-will must voluntarily chose compassionate love for a
person to be among the elect. In fact, Samuel Hopkins, who was a protégé of the
New England theologian and philosopher, Jonathan Edwards, claims in his book on
holiness that the essence of the kingdom of God is kindness and acts of compassion
oriented to the humanity of people who dislike one or whom one dislikes.[3]
Such humane compassion is two degrees of separation from selfishness.
Even so, self-love and
selfishness can be distinguished. Not only is the former term theological
whereas the latter is of the domain of ethics; self-love, unlike selfishness,
can include the intention and effort that benefits be extended to other people without
instantiating compassion. In his book on virtue, Edwards himself distinguishes
selfishness from “compounded self-love,” which differs from simple self-love
because benefits are intentionally extended to other people rather than limited
to oneself.[4]
Similarly, Pierre Nicole, a seventeenth-century Jansenist Catholic priest and
theologian, claims that the inherently sinful self-love can nonetheless be
cleverly manifested as courtesy—but not interior kindness!—to other people
because more can be gotten from laying out honey than from the stinginess of
selfishness. Had the subway passengers moved their respective backpacks so
someone standing could sit down to withstand the primitive, inconsiderate
operation of the trains, perhaps a person who might have been useful might
have sat in the suddenly empty seat. To clear off a seat with the intention of
benefitting can be distinguished from having compassion for a passenger trying
not to fall over or even be thrown forward in the train-car at the next
station-stop. Hopkins, Edwards, and Nicole were all
very clear in averring that even if self-love can have intentional beneficial
consequences for other people, which are of course in the acting person's
self-interest, the root is still a sin, and a sin is not identical to a vice or
any unethical decision or action. Sin is utterly incompatible with compassion
that resonates either from love directed to God (i.e., caritas) or selfless
love (i.e., agape). Self-interest, which
is selfishness oriented to a goal, and is based in ethics rather than theology,
is incompatible only with the second type of Christian love, agape. Even so,
exercising such (wholly religious) agape love can be very unethical. In the
religious (but not ethical) domain, ethical scruples should not get in the way
of obeying a divine command.
In Fear and Trembling,
Kierkegaard distinguishes the universally-accessible moral domain from that of
the divine command that only Abraham receives.
What is attempted murder (of Abraham’s son, Isaac) in moral (and legal)
terms is a sacrifice in religious terms. Both domains are valid in themselves
and their respective meanings, and they relate to each other, as in the story
of Abraham, but attempted murder and religious sacrifice are qualitatively
different. This point is also clear in the Book of Job, as Job is a righteous
man and thus does not deserve to be made to suffer by the devil even as a test
sanctioned by the Old Testament deity. Abstractly stated, divine omnipotence
(i.e., all-powerful) means that divine command cannot be constrained by human
ethical principles. Regarding the five Commandments that have ethical conduct,
it is explicitly based on divine command, and thus on divine will, and thus is
not a constraint on the deity. This does not mean that the ethical itself is
theological in nature.
So, while it is tempting to
relegate a selfish person to hell as a sordid reprobate, especially as
selfishness is antithetical to benevolentia universalis, which in turn is
a manifestation of “God is love” in Christianity, both our own finite nature as
judges and the distinction between acting unethically and obeying a divine
command, and, moreover, being saved, mitigate against making such a hasty and
wholly convenient category mistake that superimposes that of the creature onto
the Creator. It could be that the man on a crowded subway train puts his
backpack on the seat next to him because suffers from PTSD or is autistic. Even
such a simple justification, which separates our ethical verdict from God’s
judgment on the man’s selfishness, can easily pass by mere creatures such as
homo sapiens.
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Sarah Mullally as the Archbishop of Canterbury
On January 28, 2026, Sarah
Mullally became the first woman to occupy the seat of the archbishop of
Canterbury, which is the spiritual leader of the Church of England under its
governor, the British King (or Queen) and of the worldwide Anglican Communion,
which includes the Episcopal Church. The King (or Queen) being above the
archbishop in the Church of England is in line with Thomas Hobbes’
seventeenth-century theory that the sovereign should be in charge of church and
state lest civil war break out (again). Just as a British king is a man and a
queen is a woman, so too, as of 2026, the Archbishop of Canterbury could be a
man or a woman. This of course set the Anglicans even further off from the
Roman Catholic Church, where only men can be priests and bishops, including that
of Rome (i.e., the Pope). I contend that the intransigence on this point is due
to a logical error involving a category mistake just for added fun.
The Confirmation of Election
service out of which Mullaly became the Archbishop of Canterbury “marks a
milestone for the Church of England, which ordained its first female priests in
1994 and its first female bishop in 2015.”[1]
That was not long before 2026, so progressives in that Church had reason to be
astounded as the swiftness of the change. In no small measure, the relative
progressive stance of King Charles after his conservative mother, Queen
Elizabeth, enabled the first woman to occupy the position in just a decade
after the first woman was made a bishop in the Church of England. The tremendous
change in the societal role of woman in the West since the early 1970s and the
effect of this change on how all of Jesus’s disciples being men in the Gospels has
been perceived differently can also be said to be factors in Mulally’s confirmation
as the archbishop. Seeing in the contemporary world that women are perfectly
capable of leading large organizations and even governments, Christians would
be more likely to view the all-male discipleship in the Gospels as reflecting
the societal context of Jesus or the writers of the Gospels and thus as not
bearing for the contemporary world. Additionally, the point that just because
Jesus selects only men in the Gospels doesn’t in itself mean that only men could
be disciples could back up the historical-context argument.
Nowhere in the Gospels does Jesus
say that only men can be disciples; were that line in the stories, then
adjusting to the modern context would be more difficult from a theological
standpoint. One of the problems with the notion of scripture is that
everything in it must be taken as truth, so distinguishing, for example,
between Paul’s personal opinion on women as leaders and a theological point
that women should not be leaders in the Church is unfortunately difficult to
do, if not utterly forbidden. That Paul’s stance on female leaders is so
obviously his opinion, likely reflective of the world in which he lived, raises
the thornier problem of including letters written to churches as part of
scripture. Once a document has been declared to be scriptural, separating the
wheat from the chaff becomes very difficult if not impossible from a
theological standpoint. This is reflected in the opposition to Mullally’s
appointment.
“Gafcon, a global organization of
conservative Anglicans, says Mullally’s appointment is divisive because a
majority of the Anglican Communion still believes only men should be bishops.”[2]
In the Gospels, however, Jesus does not say, “Only men should be bishops,” and
that he chooses only men is descriptive rather than normative. Hume’s
naturalist fallacy holds that you can’t get normativity from a statement that is
only descriptive. In other words, you can’t get “ought” out of “is”; something
more is needed to say that what is, should be. If, for example, Jesus is to
say, “only men should be my disciples” in the Gospels, the readers would expect
a justification to also be stated as to why only men should be in the
religious role. If there is a theological justification, readers would
naturally expect Jesus to state it.
These problems aside, that the
Roman Catholic Church had come to recognize Mary Magdalene as the Apostle to
the Apostles may undercut that sect’s insistence that only men can (and should)
be priests and bishops, especially since the discovery of the Gospel of Mary
Magdalene in which she occupies a significant place in Jesus’s ministry. So
perhaps more stunning than the swift change in the Church of England in the
appointment of Mullally is the utter stubbornness of social-religious
conservatives in that Church as well as in the Church of Rome.
Moreover, that matters given
scant if any attention in the Gospels (hence excluding Paul’s personal letters
to his congregations) have been so easily blown out of proportion many centuries
after the Gospels were written, such as homosexuality, gender and the
priesthood, and even abortion, demonstrates the vulnerability of the human mind’s
self-check mechanism in the domain of religion (and politics). Religion loses
its core element of transcendence and is instead so easily filled with personal
ideology, in which is none other than self-love as self-idolatry. Rather than
having compassion for “thy enemies,” ideological worship of oneself belies Jesus’s
message in the Gospels on how to enter the Kingdom of God. Ironically,
compassion even to the marginalized is in line with Paul’s dictum not to cause
one’s brother (or sister) to stumble.
Lest this be viewed as an unabashedly progressive stance, it should be observed that feminist interpretations of the Gospels’ contents can easily replace theology with (feminist) ideology, such that the religion that results is in the very image of the feminists themselves. The same can be said of remaking Christianity according to queer theory. Such extravagances are just as damaging as reducing Christianity to opposition to abortion and homosexuality even though those two topics are not mentioned scarcely at all directly in the Gospels, and blowing one’s inferences out of proportion such that the religious text is distended beyond recognition is itself a manifestation of self-idolatrous ideology.
I contend
that were Christian sects to actually follow Jesus’s principles, conservative
clergy would be oriented to serving the groups despised rather than fighting
against them, and feminist and gay laity would serve conservative men in the clergy
in respect to their humane needs. The last are first, and many of the first are
actually last unless they put themselves after those whom they loath.
Therefore, the conservative Anglican clergymen who opposed Mullally’s
appointment were actually obliged as Christians to become servants of the female
Archbishop of Canterbury, essentially washing her feet rather than castigating
her as if being a female bishop rendered her as the Anti-Christ. Compassion for
one’s detractors and those whom one dislikes does not imply agreement; rather,
it is to begin the chore of expanding human nature to become a bridge of sorts
to the Kingdom of God already in this world.
2. Ibid.
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Devil’s Advocate
In the film, Devil’s Advocate (1997), human
free-will plays a very important role. It has implications not only for whether
humans tend to be good or evil, but also on how culpable God is for the evil
that committed by humans. One of the devil’s sons by a mortal woman, Kevin
Lomax, must choose whether or not to impregnate his half-sister, Christabella
Andreoli, to produce the Anti-Christ, which John Milton, who is the devil, wants
so much. In Christian theology, both the extent of free-will and how tainted it
is from the Fall have been debated. Even within Augustine’s works, his thought
changes. The one thing that cannot be asserted is that free-will both does and
does not exist. Also, that so many greedy people have been so destructive of
democracies and even the planet does not necessarily mean that God is
responsible or that humans are not capable of choosing to do good over evil.
The full essay is at "Devil's Advocate."