↪unenlightened You're backpedaling on your own and the article's insinuations. What do you think the statements "in case you thought the constitution would protect you" or "Kochs to rewrite the constitution" mean and imply? Once you figure that out, compare it with the facts and you will see that both you and the article are the ones guilty of hyperbole. — Thorongil
The next Hitler is as likely to come from your country as mine. — Mongrel
To bring the mark into the light is to bring out the good. — Metaphysician Undercover
We deny ourselves the capacity for understanding the other's intent, by designating it as evil, because the intent to do evil is irrational and cannot be understood. So we must allow that the other's actions are guided by some good, it is just inconsistent with our good. There is a need for reconciliation, not a designation of opposing sides. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I disagree, I think that "evil" is a stronger word than sin, signifying a greater transgression. I think if we ask many of the same questions of "evil', and of "sin", we will come up with different answers, signifying a difference between them. For example, if we ask of sin and of evil, are they forgivable, the answer is likely that sin is forgivable, but evil is not. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course, many theists also subscribe to revealed theology, and thus contend that it is possible to experience God directly. — aletheist
Only if God is not real. — aletheist
why couldn't humans be the same way? — Marchesk
And what's wrong with that? Isn't that what it's like for God? A perfectly good God has no free will to do evil. — Marchesk
Imagine you are the government and the wealthy, with excess resources and the power to direct them to create more resources and social well-being, yet when they question coms about what you should do you say: "Ehhhh, I'm just going to nothing. That riff raft just keeps making bad decisions. If only they would make the right choice, direct themselves properly, to pull themselves up by their bootstraps, they could be prosperous like me." It's utter libertarian bullshit. — TheWillowOfDarkness
As for thinking murder justifiable or not, this is ambiguous. A better phrasing would be "the existence of murder is justifiable". And that's exactly what the free will defence claims; that the existence of murder is justified (on the grounds that free will is a good). — Michael
You have to actually show that the things that the free will theodicist is referring to when he talks about evil (e.g. murder) actually are unjustifiable, and so actually are evil. — Michael
You can't simply define a term in such a way that your opponent's claim is false by definition. — Michael
You seem to simply be asserting that certain voluntary and harmful actions cannot be justified, — Michael
The free will theodicist argues... — Michael
Then you haven't justified your claim that nothing can justify evil. You admit that your prior response "True by definition. If it's justified, it's not evil." is equivocation, and equivocation is a fallacy. — Michael
the existence of free will justifies the existence of harm, and if evil is unjustified then this harm isn't evil.
It seems to me that you're treading close to equivocation, where the so-called evil I see by looking around is evil in a sense in which "not justified" isn't part of the definition. — Michael
what needs to be argued is that certain acts are indeed evil (i.e. unjustified). — Michael
Citation needed. — Michael
I don't think free will justifies the existence of evil, regardless. Not for a perfectly good God. A different sort of God, sure. — Marchesk
"why would an all-powerful, all-knowing, benevolent God create people of bad character?" — Michael
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
Why would it need to be me? — Marchesk
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
I'm just going to say that it's not good for a serial killer to have the free will to kill people, and I don't think other people believe it is good either. — Marchesk
