makes every God's action good. — Henri
In some Gnostic cosmology Yaldabaoth, a lesser demiurge associated with Yahweh of the Torah and not with the highest God, is the self-deluded (in believing that he is the highest God) creator of this flawed world, with all its good and evil. — Janus
You don't get what good means. — Henri
If God exists and He is all good and all powerful why does He allow evil? — MysticMonist
God exists, but She is the God of all things, not just human beings. To you puny humans, "evil" means only 'something we humans don't like'. Grow up! We all share the same world, and we all have the right to live there. — Pattern-chaser
If god is supposed to care about pigs and cows, she has a lot to answer for. — Echarmion
Really? I thought that one fell squarely on humans, not God. Or must She bear the responsibility for everything, regardless of who does it? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
If you are all-knowing and all-powerful, it follows that you are also all-responsible. — Echarmion
Is it God we're discussing, or just a scapegoat? — Pattern-chaser
So, unlike a classical universe, although still fully deterministic, prediction become impossible in principle as well as in practice in such a universe. Even for God. — Stephen Cook
Since we are a part of this material universe, we too are made of billiard balls. Therefore, the only way for Free Will to exist is for it to exist outside the time and space constraints of a material universe. — Stephen Cook
If you are all-knowing and all-powerful, it follows that you are also all-responsible. — Echarmion
Omnipotence is a defining characteristic of God in the context of this problem.
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...God isn't really a god after all, since she's neither omniscient nor omnipotent. — Echarmion
Or perhaps the material universe is the illusion and the free will we experience is actually the deeper truth. Your approach ignores metaphysics and directly jumps to physicalism. — Echarmion
I don't ignore metaphysics. I deny it. — Stephen Cook
How does knowing everything (omniscience) and having unlimited power (omnipotence) make God responsible for Everything? — Pattern-chaser
Responsibility flows from the ability to act and the duty to do so. An omniscient and omnipotent God has an unlimited ability to act. The duty is self-imposed by the third attribute - benevolence. The combination of all three is incompatible with suffering in a universe created by that God, hence the theodicy problem. — Echarmion
Good and evil are relative. No, I don't mean that as an open-ended assertion, I mean that good to one species (humans) can be evil to another (bacteria), so it's relative in that sense. It's all down to context. — Pattern-chaser
So omnipotence and omniscience have nothing to do with responsibility or duty: that comes from benevolence, from God being 'good'. Hmm, OK. So if God eliminates the tuberculosis bacteria, has She done good to humans, evil to bacteria, or both? Or neither, as would be my view. Good and evil are relative. No, I don't mean that as an open-ended assertion, I mean that good to one species (humans) can be evil to another (bacteria), so it's relative in that sense. It's all down to context. Is God, omnipotent as She is (apparently), expected to act so that Her actions are 'good' for all living things, or She is branded 'evil'? That makes no sense to me. — Pattern-chaser
And there's another way they're relative, equally specific. Good requires the existence of evil for its very meaning. You can't have yin alone; it is only meaningful in contrast and comparison to yang. So it is with good and evil too.
Therefore a 'good' God would necessarily have to create evil, if only to give that goodness some meaning. That rather puts paid to the idea of a 'good' God, doesn't it? And remember, you're considering God as a creator-God (as I do not, but that's OK), so it's God who creates evil, if it is created, as there is no other creator to do it, is there? This seems to lead to the conclusion that a 'good' God would have to create evil in order to be a 'good' God. :chin:
So there is no Problem of Evil. It's just a mistake; a misunderstanding. — Pattern-chaser
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