Rebellion

E532989

"Rebellion" is a philosophical chapter in Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel *The Brothers Karamazov* in which Ivan Karamazov challenges the justice of God by confronting the problem of innocent suffering.

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Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf chapter
philosophical text
addressesConcept moral responsibility
rejection of harmony built on suffering
suffering of children
author Fyodor Dostoevsky NERFINISHED
centralProblem compatibility of divine goodness with innocent suffering
countryOfOrigin Russian Empire
featuresCharacter Ivan Karamazov NERFINISHED
firstPublishedIn The Brothers Karamazov NERFINISHED
genre philosophical fiction
religious literature
hasCharacterRole Ivan Karamazov as speaker NERFINISHED
hasTitleInRussian Бунт
influencedField existentialist theology
philosophy of religion
influencedThinker Albert Camus NERFINISHED
Lev Shestov NERFINISHED
Nikolai Berdyaev NERFINISHED
language Russian
literaryDevice dialogue
philosophical argumentation
literaryForm prose
literaryMovement Russian literature of the Golden Age
mainTheme innocent suffering
justice of God
problem of evil
theodicy
narrativeFocus Ivan Karamazov’s protest against divine justice
originalWorkLanguage Russian
partOf The Brothers Karamazov NERFINISHED
philosophicalTopic ethics
existentialism
faith and reason
freedom
religious doubt
precedesInNarrative The Grand Inquisitor NERFINISHED
publicationCentury 19th century
publicationYearOfContainingWork 1880
questionedConcept Christian theodicy
divine providence
ultimate harmony of creation
questionForm protest against the suffering of innocents
relatedWork The Grand Inquisitor NERFINISHED
setWithinWork the narrative of the Karamazov family
workContainedIn Part II of The Brothers Karamazov NERFINISHED

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