Sure. But pain =/= evil. That's the distinction I was pointing out. — khaled
There are plenty of things that are neither good nor bad that we can do and others we can't do. — khaled
There are plenty of things that are neither good nor bad that we can do and others we can't do.
— khaled
I'm beginning to doubt this claim. — TheMadFool
Is running good or bad? — khaled
I know, I'm asking TheMadFool because he seems to think it has some sort of static moral value. — khaled
1. If God (an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent person) exists, then he would not suffer innocents to live in ignorance in a dangerous world — Bartricks
1. If God exists, then he would not suffer innocents to live in ignorance in a dangerous world
2. God exists
3. Therefore, God has not suffered innocents to live in ignorance in a dangerous world — Bartricks
You must have received a specific piece of revelation supplied by god to come to the conclusion that guilt => punishment. — ToothyMaw
Guilt is guilt, and your comeuppance could reasonably come from anyone it seems to me - unless god stipulates that it is only he who can punish certain acts in certain ways. And if god doesn't make that stipulation, then, according to his own laws, he might be rendered not so omnibenevolent, and thus not exist. Or be evil. . — ToothyMaw
You have just begged the whole question by assuming that we are innocent! It's absurd. Look, if God exists, you're in a prison. That's the point I was making. It follows logically. Here: — Bartricks
What about revelation? According to the holy texts supplied by the Christian god, for example, one could indeed be demonstrated to be totally innocent in the presence of a supposedly omnibenevolent god. And if one is innocent why would they potentially suffer more than someone who isn't innocent? This disjunction seems to indicate very little thought on the part of an omniscient, omnipotent person. And surely determining one's guilt against a set of interpretable but still infallible laws is a function of reason? — ToothyMaw
Furthermore, I don't see why guilt would necessarily require punishment in the mind of an omniscient, omnibenevolent, omnipotent being. You must have received a specific piece of revelation supplied by god to come to the conclusion that guilt => punishment. And if you have that my other post applies - people who are innocent according to god might be being punished or punished more than those who are more guilty. — ToothyMaw
And even if you have that specific piece of revelation, what makes it okay for god to mete out the punishments and not humans (or a chimp for that matter)? Guilt is guilt, and your comeuppance could reasonably come from anyone it seems to me - unless god stipulates that it is only he who can punish certain acts in certain ways. And if god doesn't make that stipulation, then, according to his own laws, he might be rendered not so omnibenevolent, and thus not exist. Or be evil. . — ToothyMaw
An omnibenevolent being would do that which is perfectly good. — Philosophim
Now if that being is already omnipotent, it can even do things that are contradictions, why would it need to jail anyone? — Philosophim
Guilty beings could simply be reformed, or even changed on God's whim. Lessons could be imparted without any suffering or punishment. If God requires that the guilty must be punished, then God simply wants to watch guilty beings suffer for its own sake. — Philosophim
You're putting the cart before the horse. An omnipotent being determines what is right and good, for otherwise they would not be omnipotent. — Bartricks
Because our source of insight into what is good and right is our reason and it is from that information that we can glean something about God's character. — Bartricks
A good person doesn't care unduly about what evil people do to one another; doesn't give them the same attention they give to the innocent, and so on. — Bartricks
A good person does not indiscriminately want others to be happy - not if you consult your reason. — Bartricks
It is no more than God communicating to us that He wants some to come to harm for harm's sake. And that does not imply God is bad, for the people in question are gits. — Bartricks
1. If God exists, then he would not suffer innocents to live in ignorance in a dangerous world
2. God exists
3. Therefore, God has not suffered innocents to live in ignorance in a dangerous world
— Bartricks
Valid but unsound I reckon. At least #1 is false, to my mind. Omnibenevolence only entails that from God's POV everything is good. That's perfectly consistent with human suffering. I'm a meta-ethical relativist. So you always have to specify a POV from which something is good or evil to avoid gibbering. — bert1
But an omnibenevolent being would never choose to do wrong, even if they could. — Philosophim
Are we omnibenevolent? No. We are imperfect beings that do a lot of immorality for our personal self satisfaction. Revenge for example. — Philosophim
No. I don't want them being happy off of doing the wrong thing. I don't want them profiting off of doing the wrong thing. — Philosophim
But an omnibenevolent being would never choose to do wrong, even if they could.
— Philosophim
I never said otherwise. My point is that an omnipotent being determines what's right and good. My point wasn't that they will sometimes do what is wrong and bad. — Bartricks
Consider: if your mother hates herself for what she did, that would be good, not bad, would it not? — Bartricks
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