Bob Ross
who I guess you're defining as pre-Christian?
But how would a classical theist...apply this concept of omnipotence to the usual set-up requiring a theodicy?
When the questioner asks why God did not create a world without (or merely with less) suffering, this request doesn't seem to have anything to do with what is metaphysically possible, or what would be beyond "innate" power.
I'm glad to be considered your friend :smile: but . . . have you mistaken me for another TPFer? I don't think we've conversed before. If I've forgotten, my apologies.
Bob Ross
The cost of this move, however, is that God no longer has alternative possibilities or deliberative choice in the ordinary sense. A purely actual, necessary being cannot do otherwise than it does. As a result, moral predicates such as responsibility, permission, or justification apply only analogically, not literally.
This assumes that it would have been better for their to be less suffering at the cost of the natural world in which we live now; and I am not sure why that would be the case. Again, this assumes that God has a magical power to create a world which is better than the one we have because we have this intuition that suffering is bad and that we can conceive of a world without it; but this confuses metaphysical possibility with conceivability.
This isn’t true for classical theism simpliciter, but my flavor of it would say that a completely actualized and pure intellect would always have to pick the best option. This is because it has to have full knowledge of everything that is real and what could exist due to lacking nothing at what it is (which is an intellect); and the nature of an intellect is that it always wills what it perceives as best; and what this being, since it has perfect knowledge, perceives as best is what is best; and it has unrestrained power to will what it perceives as best (which would be what is best in this case). This means that the world which was created, in its entirety, must be the best out of the options that could have been out of necessity.
What is best is a creation perfectly ordered towards what is perfectly good; which is God Himself. So whatever may be contained in God’s creation must have been, at least prior to any Great Fall, perfectly ordered towards Himself (which is perfect unity, communion of persons, complementary natures, etc.).
In that sense, classical theism preserves internal coherence by stepping outside the moral framework that gives rise to the problem of evil, rather than resolving it within that framework
J
This assumes that it would have been better for their to be less suffering at the cost of the natural world in which we live now; and I am not sure why that would be the case. — Bob Ross
we have this intuition that suffering is bad and that we can conceive of a world without it — Bob Ross
Bob Ross
But not to assume it is to assume something much harder to swallow -- that this is indeed the best of all possible worlds, so good that not even God could make it any better
How would one go on to argue which of the two assumptions is more likely? I don't know if there's a "likely-ometer" we can employ!
But in favor of the first assumption, it's hard to disagree with the idea that a world without the suffering of my neighbor's child wouldn't be a better world
Surely just one could have been spared?
It could only mean that God's idea of the best doesn't remotely resemble what a human would mean
No, that's too broad-brush. We have the intuition that a great deal of suffering is bad and that we can conceive of a world without at least some of it
There are, by the way, other defenses of the ways of God that don't back us into this corner, as you of course know.
J
It could only mean that God's idea of the best doesn't remotely resemble what a human would mean - J
This is partially true, I think: for example, we tend to think suffering is intrinsically bad; but I don’t think this is true. — Bob Ross
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Ecurb
↪Ecurb This objection trades on an ambiguity between suffering as a chosen challenge and suffering as imposed harm. Once that distinction is made, the argument loses its force — Truth Seeker
Corvus
Therefore, such a deity cannot be simultaneously omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent. — Truth Seeker
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Ecurb
I am not convinced the Biblical God is good. — Truth Seeker
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“Parents must prevent all foreseeable risks.” — Truth Seeker
* Parents do not have certainty of death if their adult son joins the military.
* Parents do not have the authority to prevent adult children from joining the military.
* Parents do not have the power to prevent the harm even if they disapprove. — Truth Seeker
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* parents could not intervene in suicidal missions,
* guardians could not stop terminally dangerous choices,
* authority would be morally hollow. — Truth Seeker
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