GoodbyeDave
Well-Known Member
The problem is your definition of "good" as "obeying laws": what is known as the deontological theory of ethics. This is an assumption born out of a background in Abrahamic religions, where goodness is the same as obeying God.There is a problem faced by every theory of God as someone who created the entire universe out of nothing and who is the source of all laws and principles of nature and existence. The problem this kind of formulation brings up is that if God is the source of everything then there is no rational justification for calling Him good or righteous. Generally if you're going to call someone good or righteous it is because there is a particular standard of behavior (which transcends them) to which they adhere.
An alternative is virtue ethics, which defines being good as behaving in a manner that proceeds from natural excellence and so leads to well-being. This explains why we use the same term for a good man and a good book. Can we define a creator as good in this way? Well, a good house-builder is one who builds good houses, so a good creator would be one who makes the best possible universe. If we are going to say that this is not the best possible world, we have to show how things could be done better. For example, should God intervene every time a human tries to commit murder? If he did, where would our free will be? And if there is no free will in the universe, if it can never behave in a way that God cannot predict, then how can it be a good example of a universe? It would be nothing more than an extension of God.