But God didn't create the conditions of pain. He merely gave us the capacity to feel pain. — Joel Evans
That's besides the point though. — Joel Evans
You and I have been talking past each other. I don't think the presence of pain is a bad thing, and you do. I think that the good of having a fully-formed nervous system (pain, pleasure, and all feelings included) is better than having no fully-formed nervous system and no pain. — Joel Evans
That's the same thing :lol:. — schopenhauer1
There is a difference between causing pain and giving one the capacity for pain. — Joel Evans
God (according to theism) gave us noses but that doesn't mean he directly causes us to smell things. — Joel Evans
Whence noses then? — schopenhauer1
I never said that. Pay attention. I said the conditions for pain.. which you are replacing with capacity. Same thing. — schopenhauer1
That still doesn't show that the conditions for pain are bad. I think that the natural use of pain (as a way of keeping an organism balanced and healthy) makes pain not an inherently bad thing. — Joel Evans
Because that pain serves a good purpose and isn't inherently bad. — Joel Evans
That seems immoral to create a universe with the capacity for pain, whether to see them overcome it or any other reason. — schopenhauer1
They are not overcoming pain, rather it is serving its natural function in their bodies. If I smell something disgusting, that is unpleasant, but it's serving a natural function in our body. If pain is serving a natural function, why is it immoral to create a universe with the capacity for pain? — Joel Evans
So we have to go through pain to overcome it? Why must anything be subject to pain in this scheme? That seems immoral to create a universe with the capacity for pain, whether to see them overcome it or any other reason. — schopenhauer1
My question was regarding the counterfactual possibility that God could have created a universe where its nature was not to have the capacity for pain. — schopenhauer1
And yet my question still stands of why he would need to create a universe without the capacity for pain. What is wrong with pain when it serves its natural function? — Joel Evans
You could very well be right that it would be better to live in a world without pain, but you haven't shown me why. — Joel Evans
This world we live in now has pain that may "serve its natural function", but the point is there could have been a universe that does not have pain, and in fact has no need for pain to serve "its natural function". — schopenhauer1
Why is a universe without the capacity for pain fundamentally better than one with the capacity for pain? — Joel Evans
To me, its foundational that pain, suffering, negative states are bad and causing conditions which inevitably will lead to them, is wrong if it can be avoided. To purposely create conditions for these negative conditions, when other alternatives can have been created etc.. — schopenhauer1
So pain is bad because pain is bad (foundationally). Makes sense, though I did offer an explanation of pain where is pain is not foundationally bad (when it is serving its natural function). — Joel Evans
Based on this, it seems that saying pain is bad foundationally faces problems from the natural-function argument. — Joel Evans
Pain is bad, even if it has a function to tell you that something is wrong. It can be both. — schopenhauer1
good because they naturally follow their natures — Gregory
They are not capable of doing true evil, they did not ask to exist, and they are good because they naturally follow their natures.
The distinction between a human and an animal is not as great for me than it is for a theist. Animals kill and eat each other. Therefore I believe we can do the same, although we are evolved enough to be capable of understanding that we should cause the least suffering we can for other species — Gregory
Creating the conditions for pain isn't immoral in itself. Some cure could cause pain but it doesnt mean it is immoral since it has a good purpose. — Wigi
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