(Maybe I should apologize that this reply couldn’t be brief. Often it just isn’t possible to adequately answer briefly.)
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Proof, or good reason to believe--we don’t significantly disagree.
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”The (as definitionally goes without saying) subjective nature of our experience, with experience being the center and source of what we know about our physical surroundings, suggests that there’s no more reason to believe in the Materialist’s inanimate and neutral Reality than in is his objective Realist metaphysics.” — Michael Ossipoff
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As I have said before, experience is inescapably both objective and subjective. There is necessarily both an experiencing subject and an experienced object. Materialists forget this -- focusing on the experienced object to the exclusion of the experiencing subject -- thus committing Whitehead's Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness.
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Yes, the experiencer and hir (his/her) surroundings are mutually complementary.
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”But neither what I’ve just said, nor what you said, answers the question about why Benevolence would (in some lives) put us through a pretty horrible experience. …even though it’s temporary, arguably not real, and not-itself-created.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Yes. This is a profound question. The best I can come up with is, as you suggest, it is a small thing in the "big picture" -- a side effect that will be made up for in other ways. But, I claim no certainty here.
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I said it, but that answer didn’t entirely satisfy me.
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Can major injury, misery and horror, followed by early death be “made up for”?
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It can certainly be argued that risk, and sometimes hurt, suffering, loss and the most extreme suffering and horror, are an inevitable aspect of life.
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Who’s to say whether the good things about life mean that we should be conceived and born, when, for many persons’ and animals’ lives, that means undergoing tremendous injury, loss, and sometimes the worst misery and horror.
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Is it necessary to be in a life? Only for enjoyment and (sometimes intolerable) suffering. Someone who wasn’t in a life in the 1st place wouldn’t care a bit. Of course it isn’t even meaningful to speak of someone who isn’t in a life, and whether they’re worse off than someone who is conceived and born.
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I’ll repeat the Mark Twain quote that I mentioned in a previous thread:
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“Before I was born, I was dead for millions of years, and it didn’t inconvenience me a bit.”
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I agree with Barbara Ehrenreich, who said that death doesn’t interrupt life; life interrupts sleep. Sleep is the natural, normal, rightful, incompletion-less, discomfort-less, dis-satisfaction-less, state-of-affairs.
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Someone who comes into being is always getting something overall net-positive? For one thing, it isn’t a meaningful question, because there’s no such thing as someone who isn’t conceived and born. But many lives are very prematurely cut short, and filled with horror, injury and misery. Need I supply details? Check out current-events. Benevolence didn’t make there be those lives.
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But would it even mean anything to say that what’s happening to those people is somehow later (if there’s reincarnation) “outweighed” or “cancelled-out”? How does that change anything when it’s happening to them? When it’s there, it’s there, and that isn’t a good thing.
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Is there any such thing as “making up for” or “canceling out” horrors like that?
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(But I emphasize that I don’t agree with those who complain about having come into being, because 1) There’s no such thing as someone who doesn’t come into being, making it meaningless to speak of hypothetically being better-off if not conceived and born; and 2) I believe that it was inevitable (not made-to-be by intention), and therefore complaint about it is meaningless; and 3) Most such people don’t know what a bad life is, and have nothing to whine about.)
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Anyway, no, I don’t believe that Benevolence made there be those lives of extreme injury, misery and horror.
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…which leads to the next quote:
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”…hence the Gnostic position, which I agree with, that God didn’t create the physical universes, or make there be them.” — Michael Ossipoff
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I see this solution as ruled out by the need for a sufficient explanation -- which must terminate in one, self-explaining source.
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You’re saying that it’s necessary to attribute (and blame) everything on the First Cause, Reality’s Intention.
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It can be shown that it’s a tautology that there is no true-and-false proposition. Likewise, there couldn’t not be the logical relations that I’ve spoken of, among abstract implications and the propositions that they’re about, and the hypothetical things that those propositions are about. …and the complex systems of them that are our life-experience stories.
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Never mind whether or not the abstract-facts, propositions and hypothetical things “exist” or are “real”. That’s irrelevant. Whether they exist or not, they have inter-referring logical relations among them, and that’s what our experience-stories consist of.
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So, just like the fact that there is no true-and-false proposition, our lives were/are inevitable too.
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So don’t blame that on God.
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The role and relation between Reality’s Intention and our lives is subtle and not obvious. You’ve heard the saying that God works in strange ways. Well, we can’t expect to understand or judge that relation that I mentioned in this paragraph. We all (Theists) agree that there’s Benevolence. As Scholastics and Apophatic Theists have said, there’s really nothing else to be said about the matter. No details or detailed explanations.
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I suggest that there’s Benevolence, meaning that things are as good as could be, given the logical inevitabilities.
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(I suggest that that includes the fact that everyone’s sequence-of-lives ends well, with final and timeless well-deserved rest with no such thing as adversity, lack, or incompletion, with increasingly deep sleep--and that, before that end, in that sequence-of-lives, there are (as you suggested) good lives.)
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Those conclusions were called heretical when the Gnostics said it, in mediaeval and earlier times, and they still aren’t welcomed by most Theists.
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Perhaps the answer is that we see things too anthropocentrically -- as though everything needs to be judged in terms of what is good for us, instead of what is good for creation as a whole.
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Do you mean “Tough luck for the unfortunate war-maimed civilians, because what matters is the greatest good for the greatest number?” That doesn’t sound like a situation that Benevolence made there be.
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It isn’t about anthropocentricity, because the same misfortunes happen to the other animals too.
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[/i]”Isn’t continuation inevitable for each timeless, inevitable logical-system?” — Michael Ossipoff[/i]
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No, I don't think so, for two reasons. First, from an Aristotelian perspective, the persistence of a being through time…
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Time is only within a physical world, a property of a physical world. I’m talking about inevitable timeless logical relations and inter-reference among timeless abstract facts about propositions about hypothetical things.
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… is the ongoing actualization of its potential to exist in the next instant. As it does not already exist in that instance, it can't act to actualize its own potential. From the perspective of a space-time manifold, just as existence here does not imply existence there, so existence now does not entail existence then. Thus, we need something outside of the space-time manifold to effect the continuity we observe.
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Referring to the situation _within_ a physical world:
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First some brief background:
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A set of hypothetical physical-quantity values, and a hypothetical relation among them (called a “physical law”) comprise, together, the antecedent of an abstract implication.
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…except that one of those hypothetical physical-quantity-values can be taken as the consequent of that abstract implication.
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Our physical universe, in our experience, seems to have some conservation-laws, such as:
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Conservation of mass-energy
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Conservation of momentum
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Conservation of angular-momentum
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…and some newer conservation laws regarding quantities observed in more recent modern physics.
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Additionally, Newton’s laws of motion (though they’ve been shown to only approximate a more general physics) include a first-law-of-motion that says that a moving object will continue its same motion unless and until acted on by a force.
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(…and let’s not have a relativity-quibble here. Newton’s laws only approximate, under special conditions, a more general physics.)
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So, within this physical universe, there are a number of laws that require the continuations that you referred to.
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…and the whole system, a physical world that’s the setting for your hypothetical life-experience-story, is inevitable because your life-experience-story, as a complex system of inter-reference and relation among abstract implications about propositions about hypothetical things, is inevitable.
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Those relations and inter-reference in those logical systems are inevitable in the same way as it’s an inevitable tautology that there’s no true-and-false proposition.
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Michael Ossipoff