We can question if this is fair — Count Timothy von Icarus
but we have to bear in mind that time is perhaps a meaningless concept to apply to a transcendent God. Perfect memory means that the past is perfectly accessible to God, able to be experienced as fully as the present. Perfect knowledge means the future, or perhaps knowledge of infinite possible futures, is also as accessible to It as the present. Thus, God exists outside the conventional boundaries of time, in which case temporal cause and effect can't be understood the way we understand it conventionally. — Count Timothy von Icarus
This logic holds if one assumes the unit of analysis for guilt is the individual, not the people. However, in the doctrine of Original Sin, mankind as a whole is condemned for the actions of their progenitors, Adam and Eve. — Count Timothy von Icarus
We use the collective as a unit for assigning guilt fairly often. Corporations are punished as a whole for bad acts. The German people were to pay reparations to the Jews as a whole for their collective, not individual actions. Arguments in favor of reparations for American slavery often also invoke a similar idea of collective and inherited guilt. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Or, if you posit the God of the pietist tradition — Count Timothy von Icarus
or for cosmologies where an evil god of equal, or almost equal power to a good one, struggles for control of reality (Manichean cosmology, Zoroastrian, etc.). — Count Timothy von Icarus
If you define any of the omni terms as "Being able to do anything without limits, even the impossible", then an omniscient, omnipowerful, and omnibenevolent being would be able to do anything, even contradictions. — Wirius
Yes, that is I think the only reasonable way to understand what omnipotence involves. Here is an argument for that: to be all powerful is to be more powerful than anyone else. A being who can do anything is more powerful than one who can do some things and not others. Thus, an omnipotent being can do anything. — Bartricks
This logic holds if one assumes the unit of analysis for guilt is the individual, not the people. — Count Timothy von Icarus
"There is no such thing as right or wrong, but only thinking makes them so." Shakespeare." — boagie
omnipotent: "The most powerful a being can be."
omniscient: "The most knowledgeable and aware a being can be."
omnibenevolent: "The most good a being can be."
Basically, God might be the best in what is possible, but God is limited by what is possible. — Wirius
Like the PoE, the PoH is only a "problem" for the notion of an omnibenevolent deity. "Hell", btw, is just imaginary revenge-porn sadism, nothing more. :halo: Again, justice =/= evil, Fool. — 180 Proof
"Could"? Must, it seems to me. And just the two omnis: all-good is irreconcilable with all-powerful. It's the problem of the "all." And if not all, then not God. No conception of such a God is even a little bit coherent; that is, zero coherence, zero possibility of coherence.God could fulfill all three....
omnipotent.... omnibenevolent — SolarWind
And what would that matter absent a complete specification? It would just be "looks like" at best, and the sensible man would leave it at that. He'd be a Pyrrhonist and simply acknowledge the reality of the appearance of the hanged man.Can you tell just from what you see — TheMadFool
Say it's in the 1800s. You're riding from your small town to another settlement and along the way you come across a man dangling from a tree with a noose around his neck - he's dead of course. Can you tell just from what you see - a man hanged to death - whether it's murder (evi) or it's a judicial execution (justice)? — TheMadFool
If it’s an infant and not a man, I know it’s evil.
There have been infants tortured to death before.
Ergo problem of evil (among many other sources of evil)
Also God would never need to enforce this justice. Justice is a punishment you inflict on someone for hurting you or someone else. You can’t hurt God, so he’s not the grieving party. And God could’ve removed every instance of someone hurting someone else, and chose not to do so. So in both cases, (whether the punishment is justified by you supposedly hurting God or someone else), God is being evil — khaled
I think you're missing an important piece in the puzzle - free will. — TheMadFool
I can tell it's a corpse left to rot in the open. Probably a suicide. :mask: — 180 Proof
What exactly do you mean. Free will fits into this a 100 different ways. — khaled
:100: :fire: ... Man might be to blame for his evil acts, but "God" is responsible for making it possible to commit evil acts; ergo, "God" is not omnibenevolent, or worthy of worship.He could’ve made it physically near impossible or impossible to perform evil acts ... Why didn’t [God] do so? It wouldn’t be infringing on our free will any more than limiting us from levitating at will is an infringement on free will. — khaled
He could’ve made it physically near impossible or impossible to perform evil acts (indestructible bodies for instance). Why didn’t he do so? It wouldn’t be infringing on our free will any more than limiting us from levitating at will is an infringement on free will. — khaled
Man might be to blame for his evil acts, but "God" is responsible for making it possible to commit evil acts; ergo, "God" is not omnibenevolent, or worthy of worship. — 180 Proof
And what would that matter absent a complete specification? It would just be "looks like" at best, and the sensible man would leave it at that. He'd be a Pyrrhonist and simply acknowledge the reality of the appearance of the hanged man. — tim wood
Man might be to blame for his evil acts, but "God" is responsible for making it possible to commit evil acts; ergo, "God" is not omnibenevolent, or worthy of worship. — 180 Proof
So, "deus vult", he intends the "unfortunate consequences" too. — 180 Proof
We cannot walk through brick walls, yet we exercise "free will". Explain why we could not exercise "free will" if we also could not commit evil acts. — 180 Proof
Free will requires evil, ergo pain & suffering, to be possible. You can't talk about free will without conceding pain, suffering should be part of the overall scheme. So, when you assert that God could've taken suffering out of the equation, what you actually mean is we shouldn't have free will. — TheMadFool
But only so that we're truly free. That's the whole point. — TheMadFool
Choice is central to the free will question. — TheMadFool
Think of evil as maximizing options. Sure, God made it impossible to walk through brick walls but at the very least, making us capable of evil, He expanded our choices. — TheMadFool
The more i look at the universe, just the less convinced i am that something benevolent is going on — Neil deGrasse Tyson
I said "Why did God make it so that we can commit evil acts" not "Why did God make it so that we experience pain", those are very different. — khaled
We aren't "truly free" given we can't levitate at will either by this logic. — khaled
Sans pain, evil is meaningless. — TheMadFool
Good point but explain to us how levitation can be moral/immoral? God, remember, is only concerned with moral responsibility. Perhaps there's nothing good/bad about being able to levitate or walk through walls. — TheMadFool
We aren't "truly free" given we can't levitate at will either by this logic. But we have free will. Ergo, not having certain abilities does not limit free will. Ergo, God could could have made it so that we cannot commit evil acts without infringing on our free will. Just like he made it so we can't fly without technology without infringing on our free will. — khaled
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