... my objection to your answer to the problem of evil is that it hinges on the human mind working a certain way, and God would have the power to make it not work that way, and so not require suffering on Earth. — Pfhorrest
Also consider that here on Earth people tend back toward a base level of happiness regardless of their circumstances, and some people can go back to being happy even after a horrible tragedy that they still nominally suffer from, while others can go back to being miserable even after they hit the jackpot and solved all of their nominal problems — Pfhorrest
The solution to both of those is to make human minds work differently, make people more inclined to be happy with and interested in whatever they currently have indefinitely and not get bored or tired of it and sink into bad feelings for no good reason. — Pfhorrest
suffering is required to define a baseline for happiness and in order to value happiness. — Devans99
maybe best physiologically to get the worst bit over with first - the experience of evil on earth - followed by the good bit (heaven). — Devans99
t maybe that creating an intelligent entity that is fundamentally different from ourselves is impossible even for an omnipotent God? 'Great minds think alike' is the saying - I would modify that to: 'All minds think alike'. — Devans99
I was happy as a child, without a baseline of suffering. I can conceive of a system where people are happy, and they consciously realize that, without having had to suffer, or even without having a concept of suffering.
Why couldn't God create that? He is not omnipotent? — god must be atheist
Why not go from extremely good to superbly good, to ecstatically good? Why start at a level below acceptable? — god must be atheist
That lowers the bar of "omnipotent" below the acceptable level of the definition. — god must be atheist
But people would be happier still if they have had that initial exposure to evil (so that they have a way of measuring/quantifying good). My point is that, yes, there are many 'good' answers to the question, but the only optimal answer is that happiness is maximised in those who have already experienced evil. — Devans99
But if any mind is a logic processor plus memory then even an omnipotent God can only create minds of a similar nature. Your point is similar to 'why can't God create square circles?' - an omnipotent God can only perform things that are logically possible. A mind without memory is not a mind as we know it and its the memory of evil that make the good times good. — Devans99
The lower you start, the more effective the regime is at maximising happiness over the long term (in a purely mathematical sense). — Devans99
Thanks for the reply! As you no doubt realise I am sort of playing devil's advocate here... — Devans99
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.