"The Grand Inquisitor" is a chapter that has been widely studied and debated for its philosophical and theological insights. In the chapter, Ivan Karamazov recounts a poem he has written, which tells the story of a Grand Inquisitor who has ruled with an iron fist in a country ravaged by war and famine.
The central thesis of the Inquisitor’s accusation rests on the three temptations of Christ in the wilderness (Matthew 4:1-11). The Inquisitor argues that by rejecting the three offers of the Devil—turning stones into bread, throwing himself from the temple, and accepting the kingdoms of the world—Christ placed an impossible burden upon humanity: the burden of Free Will. braca karamazovi veliki inkvizitor pdf
Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Grand Inquisitor: Free Will vs Authority "The Grand Inquisitor" is a chapter that has
: Inkvizitor tvrdi da je Hrist precenio ljude dajući im slobodu izbora. Prema njemu, ljudi su po prirodi slabi i "buntovnici" koji ne mogu da podnesu teret odgovornosti, već žude za tim da im neko kaže šta je istina i kome da se poklone. The Inquisitor argues that by rejecting the three