My argument is that we don't really value the free will to commit certain evils, nor do we consider having such free will a good thing. What we value is the free will to do non-evil things, and we're worried that some people would like to constrain us from living how we like, when it doesn't involve committing those evils. — Marchesk
Well sure, that's why we have a justice system. But you really want an omnipotent dictator to make the decision about what you are allowed to be free to do ... if that's not already contradictory? — unenlightened
That 'if' just means you want to be the omnipotent dictator. — unenlightened
Why would it need to be me? — Marchesk
Because 99% would add in other things like tax dodging, queue-jumping, petty theft, flaming, driving without due care and attention, fracking, dropping litter, and so on. — unenlightened
But what's really being argued is that God values free will at the cost of permitting various evils to exist. It's not a matter of weighing goods, it's a matter of weighing the good of free will over permitting evil. — Marchesk
Is love possible without free will? If not, could the possibility of love perhaps be a good that far outweighs the cost of permitting evil and suffering? — aletheist
But presumably God or a super AI would be able to draw the line such that we meaningfully had free will while not permitting the worst evils? — Marchesk
I certainly don't love everyone, but I also don't commit terrible crimes against anyone, although surely my character would be improved by having more empathy. I'm not seeing that my free will to love needs the ability to murder to exist. — Marchesk
"why would an all-powerful, all-knowing, benevolent God create people of bad character?" — Michael
Is love a freely willed choice, though? Do you get to choose who you love, who you hate, and who you're indifferent too? I have my doubts. — Marchesk
Let's say it is necessitated by having free will. Does that mean free will to do anything, or just free will to love? — Marchesk
I'm not seeing that my free will to love needs the ability to murder to exist. — Marchesk
Really? It seems obvious to me that love, hate, or indifference is always a choice that we make. — aletheist
Jesus taught that we should choose to love everyone - even our enemies. — aletheist
is a mistake to treat love as merely an emotion that comes and goes; in fact, it is an explicit commandment: — aletheist
How could someone have genuine free will to love, while having no genuine free will in any other respect? — aletheist
I don't know how you can choose to love anyone. — Marchesk
Sure, I can act as if I love someone, out of duty, or because I think society requires it, or because my religion demands it, but that doesn't mean I actually love them. — Marchesk
I don't see how you can divorce love and hate from feeling. Imaging telling a loved one that you brought them a gift because it was your duty. — Marchesk
But I don't think that love has much to do with free will. — Marchesk
Right - you actually love someone only if you freely choose to do so. And obviously we are not talking about romantic love here (eros), but self-sacrificing love (agape) - putting the interests of others ahead of our own. — aletheist
think the claim that we can choose who to love is as mistaken as the claim that we can choose who to be attracted to. — Michael
The exercise of will can prevent us from acting on our feelings, but it is practically unable to prevent feelings (emotions) from arising. — Bitter Crank
I think the claim that we can choose who to love is as mistaken as the claim that we can choose who to be attracted to. — Michael
But it seems the best we can do is choose to act humanely toward them, despite not loving them, because we want them to do the same to us. — Marchesk
Choosing to act humanely toward them is choosing to love them - especially if we do so not because we want them to do the same to us, but simply because they are our fellow human beings. — aletheist
Precisely by choosing to act well toward that person, despite your negative feelings about him/her, rather than simply acting in accordance with the latter. — aletheist
I don't think something can be love if it's absent the feeling. — Marchesk
Humans are imperfect lovers. We don't always love the people we're friends, family, lovers with. — Marchesk
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