Koldo
Outstanding Member
Why not?
I was asking in what way your question is related to my post.
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Why not?
I can only answer that subjectively.I was asking in what way your question is related to my post.
I can only answer that subjectively.
For the sake of this topic subjectivity is pretty much useless.Then please go ahead and answer it subjectively.
And what's wrong with subjective? Would you be philosophically inclined to suppose that the knife "accident" by an irate girlfriend that left you sans genitalia was only subjective (really, only you were affected) and so couldn't really be considered evil at all?
Because, this same argument could be made about "good," as well as evil. Let us suppose that there is a religion that God wants only what is "good" for each human being -- how would you determine what that is, when in every examinable case, it could only be subjective? What, in the end, is an "objective good?"
Well that's very interesting. Why don't you try to explain why anybody would conceive of such a thing, let alone believe in it? By "such a thing," I mean, of course, a god that:If a god exists, why would he worry about mere words, objective and subjective, that man made up and only mean anything to man. They mean nothing to any other species that lives or ever lived.
Have you ever given thought to that we are the only species that everything in this universe only makes sense to us by our own made up words?
For the sake of this topic subjectivity is pretty much useless.
Could you rephrase your question in such a way that it would allow for some sort of an objective response?
We think we are greatWell that's very interesting. Why don't you try to explain why anybody would conceive of such a thing, let alone believe in it? By "such a thing," I mean, of course, a god that:
- exists,
- doesn't worry about "mere words,"
- is neither objective nor subjective,
- created man but is uninterested in what meaning man can construe from having been thus created?
The only way the PoE works is if we can come up with an example of objective evil.
So far I've never seen anyone be able to do that. No matter how drastic or extreme, any example of evil that you can provide would be subjective.
How are you defining 'subjectivity' here?
Are thoughts subjective?
Can they be objective?
How is that relevant? A "subjective evil" is just as real as an "objective evil" in function both are addressed by Epicurus.
If you were to be given omnipotence - would you do what you want to do or what your don't want to do?“Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent.
Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil?
Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?”
― Epicurus
The most serious argument against this, generally speaking, is the "free will" excuse. God wants us to have free will, and so cannot intervene when evil happens. There are two very serious problems with this apology, which need to be explored.
The first, which is really very easy, is that free will has nothing whatever to do with natural calamity. An undersea earthquake raises a tsunami that kills a quarter million innocent people, including infants, children, nuns and murderers alike. Unless we are going to assign "free will" to the earth (and call her Gaia), this is simply not applicable.
But let's look at it from the perspective of a person doing evil, from free will. To do that, let us, just for a moment, take this argument down from its lofty heights to a merely human level -- meaning, let's leave God out of it.
Here's the scenario: there are a young woman, a young man with a knife, and police officer (armed) at night on a dark section of the street. In plain view of the officer, the young man runs towards the woman (this takes several seconds) brandishing his knife, and when he gets to her, stabs her multiple times until she falls to the ground and bleeds to death. The officer, throughout this event, does nothing. Perhaps he's religious and thinks, "who am I to interfere with his free will?"
So let's reframe old Epicurus' argument to fit this situation:
“Is the officer willing to prevent this murder, but not able? Then he is not competent.
Is he able, but not willing? Then he is a bad officer.
Is he both able and willing? Then how could the stabbing have taken place?
Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him a police officer?”
(Okay, that last clause works better for God, but never mind.) Anyway, let's look closely at the "free will" argument in this case. If the officer had got out his taser, dropped the guy on the spot, then knelt on him holding him down while calling for backup -- has the assassin been stripped of his free will? Not at all. He may yet be struggling mightily in his hot desire to kill an innocent person. His will remains what it was, he has just been prevented from exercising his will to the detriment of another person.― Evangelicalhumanist (with apologies to Epicurus)
Please discuss.
Seems to me that all that's needed is some standard established by God, and then God's creation failing to meet the standard God put in place.The only way the PoE works is if we can come up with an example of objective evil.
So far I've never seen anyone be able to do that. No matter how drastic or extreme, any example of evil that you can provide would be subjective.
You think that "free will" is the most serious argument against the problem of evil?The most serious argument against this, generally speaking, is the "free will" excuse. God wants us to have free will, and so cannot intervene when evil happens. There are two very serious problems with this apology, which need to be explored.
What function specifically?
And how are both addressed by Epecurious?
For that matter I don't recall ever seeing anywhere where Epicurious even defined what he meant by 'evil".
It usually means something that we (humans) personally object to.
In fact I can't think of any example that wouldn't fall within that category.
I have noticed that most people who find fault with God for not stopping evil, are often the same people who are offended by the biblical accounts where God does intervene to stop evil...“Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent.
Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil?
Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?”
― Epicurus
The most serious argument against this, generally speaking, is the "free will" excuse. God wants us to have free will, and so cannot intervene when evil happens. There are two very serious problems with this apology, which need to be explored.
The first, which is really very easy, is that free will has nothing whatever to do with natural calamity. An undersea earthquake raises a tsunami that kills a quarter million innocent people, including infants, children, nuns and murderers alike. Unless we are going to assign "free will" to the earth (and call her Gaia), this is simply not applicable.
But let's look at it from the perspective of a person doing evil, from free will. To do that, let us, just for a moment, take this argument down from its lofty heights to a merely human level -- meaning, let's leave God out of it.
Here's the scenario: there are a young woman, a young man with a knife, and police officer (armed) at night on a dark section of the street. In plain view of the officer, the young man runs towards the woman (this takes several seconds) brandishing his knife, and when he gets to her, stabs her multiple times until she falls to the ground and bleeds to death. The officer, throughout this event, does nothing. Perhaps he's religious and thinks, "who am I to interfere with his free will?"
So let's reframe old Epicurus' argument to fit this situation:
“Is the officer willing to prevent this murder, but not able? Then he is not competent.
Is he able, but not willing? Then he is a bad officer.
Is he both able and willing? Then how could the stabbing have taken place?
Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him a police officer?”
(Okay, that last clause works better for God, but never mind.) Anyway, let's look closely at the "free will" argument in this case. If the officer had got out his taser, dropped the guy on the spot, then knelt on him holding him down while calling for backup -- has the assassin been stripped of his free will? Not at all. He may yet be struggling mightily in his hot desire to kill an innocent person. His will remains what it was, he has just been prevented from exercising his will to the detriment of another person.― Evangelicalhumanist (with apologies to Epicurus)
Please discuss.
Why do you think God's job is the same as a police officer's job? For that matter how can Epicurus understand God? It's like an ant trying to understand a human. Really it's more of a disparity than that.“Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent.
Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil?
Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?”
― Epicurus
The most serious argument against this, generally speaking, is the "free will" excuse. God wants us to have free will, and so cannot intervene when evil happens. There are two very serious problems with this apology, which need to be explored.
The first, which is really very easy, is that free will has nothing whatever to do with natural calamity. An undersea earthquake raises a tsunami that kills a quarter million innocent people, including infants, children, nuns and murderers alike. Unless we are going to assign "free will" to the earth (and call her Gaia), this is simply not applicable.
But let's look at it from the perspective of a person doing evil, from free will. To do that, let us, just for a moment, take this argument down from its lofty heights to a merely human level -- meaning, let's leave God out of it.
Here's the scenario: there are a young woman, a young man with a knife, and police officer (armed) at night on a dark section of the street. In plain view of the officer, the young man runs towards the woman (this takes several seconds) brandishing his knife, and when he gets to her, stabs her multiple times until she falls to the ground and bleeds to death. The officer, throughout this event, does nothing. Perhaps he's religious and thinks, "who am I to interfere with his free will?"
So let's reframe old Epicurus' argument to fit this situation:
“Is the officer willing to prevent this murder, but not able? Then he is not competent.
Is he able, but not willing? Then he is a bad officer.
Is he both able and willing? Then how could the stabbing have taken place?
Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him a police officer?”
(Okay, that last clause works better for God, but never mind.) Anyway, let's look closely at the "free will" argument in this case. If the officer had got out his taser, dropped the guy on the spot, then knelt on him holding him down while calling for backup -- has the assassin been stripped of his free will? Not at all. He may yet be struggling mightily in his hot desire to kill an innocent person. His will remains what it was, he has just been prevented from exercising his will to the detriment of another person.― Evangelicalhumanist (with apologies to Epicurus)
Please discuss.
Isn't it curious that the defenders of the god notion are almost always willing to relativise morality and almost never power?The only way the PoE works is if we can come up with an example of objective evil.
So far I've never seen anyone be able to do that. No matter how drastic or extreme, any example of evil that you can provide would be subjective.
The function of "evil" as in the Problem of Evil of Epicurus.
The origin or specific nature of evil is unimportant to the problem.
The only thing that is required is the understanding that there is "evil"
(terrible, horrible, bad thing that happens to humans and other sentient being) observable in the world.
The only way to "dodge" the problem of evil
is to claim that nothing bad ever happened to anybody or anything sentient ever;
that the world as we can perceive it is "heavenly" for lack of better term.
It's indeed what Epicurus, and everybody consider as "evil", something doesn't conduct to the flourishment, happiness and prosperity of humans
(or the interested group should a non-human or supra-human perspective be adopted). Evil has never meant anything else to anybody.