A world where only good actions are possible is impossible in principle because if it were so, we would no longer be capable of making a mistake, we would no longer be human. Instead of free agency, we would be fully determined to act in a certain manner. — Cavacava
There's no cop out, it's just that most human beings really don't understand "evil". Do you understand evil? — Metaphysician Undercover
The term 'good' losses its meaning without the concept/experience of 'evil', they co-implicate each other. Imagine that you were in a world where only good could possibly happen, if so then what's good would be the way things are, it would have no differential — Cavacava
And if God doesn't see them as evil, why should he prevent them? — Metaphysician Undercover
We may think there is even change outside of our possible experience, but by definition any such change would be completely unknowable to us; and it is arguable that the idea of something completely unknowable to us is not even coherent. — John
But entire traditions are built around not recognizing this obvious fact. As someone who was in the thrall of the position before, seeing how stupid it is now, I can't really articulate why it was convincing to me. My only explanation is that people sort of hear platitudes and are convinced by them. — The Great Whatever
That looks about correct to me... — lambda
The whole belief in the existence of God is based in the assumption that the universe behaves in "mysterious ways". Nor should it appear as a cop out, because until human beings are omniscient, there will always be "mysterious" things out there. — Metaphysician Undercover
We don't need to know what the good reasons are for "there are good reasons" to follow from the premises. — Michael
Just as we don't need to know what's in the box to infer from the evidence that something is in the box (e.g. it weighs more than it would if empty). — Michael
here are good reasons for creating things that choose to do evil. — Michael
That he has a good reason for doing so would follow from the premises, even if we don't know what that good reason is. — Michael
And if you don't define evil as being unjustified then you need to defend the claim "nothing can justify evil, no amount of good.". — Michael
If evil is defined (in part) as being unjustified. If it isn't defined in this way then genocide could still be evil even if justified by the greater good. — Michael
he free will theodicist and utilitarian could simply argue that because certain harmful acts are justified for the greater good it then follows that these harmful acts aren't evil, and so the problem of evil is dismissed on the grounds that evil doesn't actually exist. — Michael
Humans are more interested in stories than either philosophy or debating. — Baden
But I think people just aren't suited to philosophizing. As a species, I mean – just a little too dumb for it. — The Great Whatever
I generally think now that philosophy doesn't have the tools to help people in life. My main philosophical interest now is sort of meta-philosophical, why people are so bad at reasoning, why they are generally intellectually dishonest, incapable of distinguishing fine-grained positions, convinced by bad arguments, drawn to implausible platitudes, etc. and why intelligence seems to be no help in guarding against any of these. — The Great Whatever
I read an argument about G's supposed foreknowledge a while back. It went along the lines that God sees all of time: past, presence and future, but it is all past to him, and since he is perfect he can't change what he remembers, therefore we are free to act any way we want. — Cavacava
so therefore interprets 'omniscience' to mean 'anything I think is possible'. — Wayfarer
The break you're looking for is to actually be God. — Wayfarer
In doing so we're forgetting a salient point - that the understanding is corrupted, we don't see the nature of the situation we're in, but instead hypothesise about something we could never know. — Wayfarer
The point is that if God is real, then "perfectly good" is whatever He is. If that turns out to be different than what we humans define as "perfectly good," then we are the ones who have it wrong, not God. — aletheist
If God is real, then who has the authority to define "perfectly good" as anything other than whatever God is? — aletheist
If God is real, then whatever He is, is perfectly good. Who are we to judge otherwise? — aletheist
Again, that explains why you are having so much difficulty with the free will defense. — aletheist
Second, there is always the possible world that J.L. Mackie describes: beings who, through their own free will, always choose to do good. If Mackie's world is possible and God can create this possible world, then the free will defense fails. — Chany
now the response is to say God cannot actually create this world and that it is up to the agents within the world to make it happen, but I do not see how, without claiming that God cannot have foreknowledge of the actions of free creatures, one can avoid God's ability to foresee which possible world contains no moral evil and create that world. — Chany
here is an interesting discussion, one that I have never personally seen discussed, about God's responsibilities and morality if God cannot know the actions of free agents ahead of time, as God effectively would be creating the world blind. — Chany
My point here is not to argue for intelligent design, just to highlight a philosophical curiosity. — aletheist
Precisely by choosing to act well toward that person, despite your negative feelings about him/her, rather than simply acting in accordance with the latter. — aletheist
Choosing to act humanely toward them is choosing to love them - especially if we do so not because we want them to do the same to us, but simply because they are our fellow human beings. — aletheist
"Dams, nests, webs, cities, and genetic engineering are not evolution" - as though this sentence was even sensical to begin with - well, I'm sorry, but it's clear that you don't have the terms of evolutionary science down well enough for this discussion to be productive. — StreetlightX
think the claim that we can choose who to love is as mistaken as the claim that we can choose who to be attracted to. — Michael
Right, so what about spider interference? Is that natural selection, or artificial selection (or spiderficial selection)? — Michael
So with that in mind, does making medicine to aid survival prevent natural selection? Or is the ability to make medicine a naturally selected trait? — Michael
What other abilities would you grant and deny the creatures living in your world? I am looking for a comprehensive response. If that seems unreasonable, maybe creating a better world than the one we have is harder than you think. — aletheist
I'll simply request, by way of being constructive, that you take a read of the paper I cited on page 3. — StreetlightX
