The judge's major judge reflects Dostoevsky's interest in religious and political issues. Dostoevsky used his voice to express his view on the legitimacy of the Roman Catholic church and the role of religion in society. At the heart of the story is the conflict between the Great Judge and Jesus. During Spanish Inquisition Jesus returned to the ground and Jews and Muslims were forced to convert to Christianity.
A large investigator is part of the story Fyodor Dostoevsky found in the book and is called the Karamozov brother. Dostoevsky is interested in analyzing the psychological impact of engaging in crime and the moral impact of participating in such abuses. Among the major judges, the characters question the legitimacy, free will and morality of religion. The main dilemma required by these characters is that it is prudent for people to abide by the laws of religion. The other problem left by these people is whether they should fulfill God's role and ignore various religious beliefs and traditions. The poet has identified various degrees of freedom, including positive and negative freedom, reasonable self-interest, Christian idealism, and Nietzsche. He did this through his various roles in his poem "The Great Judge" (Dostoyevsky, Richard and Larrisa, 27).
The grounds of the Great Judge are freedom and humanity. In this verse, Alicia is a priest and Ivan wonders God's mercy. According to a large prosecutor, the concept of freedom does not exist. The judge will observe that people need selfishness, and by doing so will the whole society benefit. This is because individual needs complement each other with the same. Based on this, the freedom that Jesus brings to the world is slavery, not freedom. When a big judge told Jesus to come again, he was destroying the church, which was shown in the poem. He further told Jesus that the devil used three things, food, power, and authority of God to seduce him (Dostoevsky and Constance, 33).
Fyodor Dostoevsky expressed similar concerns about Anomie at his novel "The Karamazov Brothers". The Great Court Judge commented that everything is legal without God and immortal life. In other words, any action becomes sensible without a moral compass, bringing indifference and separation.
Another apology based on the human dilemma can be found in the magnificent novel of the great Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-81) of the last century. (Can I add that it is a big disappoinance for modern evangelists to ignore writers like CS Lewis and ignore writers like Dostoevsky? Dostoevsky's troubles with Dostoevsky is a problem of evil How can a kind and loving God exist when the world is filled with so much suffering and evil Dostoevsky expresses this problem to his work very convincingly So, some of his passage, especially the "big questioner" of his brother Karamazov, was often reprinted in the selection, as a classic statement of the evil problem.As a result, the basic person of Dostoff Some people have an impression that they are atheists, and the view of a big judge is his own opinion.