God will permit natural evils, since they are actually opportunities for some creations’ — Isabel Hu
Given the great disparity in nature, it is not the case that god can favor each creation equally. — Isabel Hu
as long as one creation is victorious a bit more than another creation, God is showing his preference — Isabel Hu
The first reason seems a bit begging the question, for you haven’t justified that the arrangement has no rules. — Isabel Hu
If God favors all creation equally, then why different natures and characteristics are attributed to different creation? — Isabel Hu
Therefore, I don’t think that there is no role of referee, and if you believe that morality is given by God, then it seems to be more problematic with your argument. — Isabel Hu
There are certain situations which the winner will make more enemies and will probably face severe challenges; in such cases, I don’t think one wants his/her more favored one to win, and they may even wish the favored one to lose in order to protect its well-being. — Isabel Hu
Therefore, it seems that no one creation winning all the time isn’t sufficient enough to assert that God has no preference or God loves all creation equally. — Isabel Hu
God, cannot explain why God gives the mechanism of free will to us but not other creation. — Isabel Hu
However, there are still lots of common moralities that almost all human beings agree on, no matter what cultural backgrounds we have. — Isabel Hu
I personally do not find the free will defense satisfying in any case of the problem of evil, however I recognize that is not the purpose of this post. — Emma
I think it is prevalent that the Christian God favors humankind over the rest of his creation, therefore the Christian God does not love all of His creation equally (denial of premise 2). — Emma
either believe that god wants us to "rule of the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground" and conclude that god isn't omnibenevolent — TheMadFool
From this statement, it seems like you are asserting that the concept of human dominion over creation is somehow incompatible with an omnibenevolent God. — Daniel Ramli
Scout (the family dog) — Daniel Ramli
humanity is the favored creation because God places the highest worth in us. — Daniel Ramli
Therefore gods does not do his job right as a parent thus he tolerates evil — god must be atheist
I think you've misunderstood the analogy. When I refer to God as a parent, I mean only in the sense of faer love - all encompassing - for faer children - all the creatures in the universe. — TheMadFool
From that all-loving, omnibenevolence, follows god's unwillingness to intervene in the affairs of the world and hence the evil - moral and natural - we see in it. — TheMadFool
You can hurt both, for instance, by "creating a household" (i.e. existence) that not only puts, but also keeps, them in opposition. :shade:Imagine yourself to be a parent and you'll know how painful it is to take sides when your children get into a fight. You can't hurt either, so you can't aid either. — TheMadFool
In no sense is a parent deemed "good" who is "impartial" to the point of allowing her "children" to prey upon, torture & cannibalize one another. — 180 Proof
You have mentioned that an omnibenevolent god will not favor one creation over another and will treat all creation equally, such as bacteria, fish, the rich and the poor. — Isabel Hu
More or less, yes. I'm fairly certain, by and large convinced, that inequality in any way, shape, or form is immoral. In saying this I haven't strayed off course from our intuition on the matter, the intuition best exemplified by the words "all men are created equal" enshrined in the American Constitution. My view on equality is but an extrapolation of the spirit of this statement and becomes "all creatures are created equal". — TheMadFool
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.