but we know that not all good deeds or things are not equally good and same is true for evil things. — SpaceDweller
If you accept this, then you accept that evility is MORE than just a lack of goodness. Your definition was:
You need to define evil first,
"Evil is lack of good"
If you agree with this definition, then evil isn't creatable. — SpaceDweller
You have to choose between the two. Either you accept your own definition, or you reject your own opinion on evility.
Of course you don't have to do this for yourself, but you have to do this for the sake of your OWN argument. You can't say that something is all red and the next minute say that that thing is all green. You can't say that evility is the lack of goodness, and you can't say that there are degrees of lacking. It lacks only if it isn't there.
I showed this to you right away, and you kept insisting that your definition was okay. Now that you got caught on the horn of your own dilemma, now we are at the same spot as eons ago. How long will this go on? Quo usque tandem abutere Cataline, pacientia nostra?
I don't have a definition but I would certainly not limit good to morally right since the bible ie. mentions good things which don't necessarily deal with morality. — SpaceDweller
I think genesis 1:3-4 is one good example:
And God said, βLet there be light,β and there was light. God saw that the light was good
So using your logic one could say "light" is neutral, but it's not, at least not in this context. — SpaceDweller
these two clearly show that you haven't noticed the Aristotle-defined fallacy in argument you have in your own mind, the fallacy of equivocation. Two things, two different condepts have the same word, and the speaker treats the two concepts as one.
problem with your reasoning I think is that you compare good and evil with 0 and 1, but 0 and 1 don't have shades. — SpaceDweller
The problem is differnt. You can't see that if one has 3 goodnesses, or 6 or 93848 goodnesses, those are different. But their lack, can only be 0 or zero goodness. This is not negotiable; if something is missing, then it does not matter how much of it is missing, it is not there, period.
Therefore I may accept that goodness can be great or little, but evility can only be on value, ACCORDING TO YOUR DEFINITION. Keep in mind that I use YOUR defintion to disprove your argument, not any other definition, since you are compelled to accept your own -- otherwise you would not make it if you did not believe it, would you.
we all know satan was created by god with free will. and it choose to defy god.
but you're trying to prove that god created evil being which is not true. — SpaceDweller
Is it in the scriptures that Satan had free will, or you made that up along with the people whose values you still embrace? Please tell me the book and line number where it is explicitly stated that Satan had free will.
In my readings I encountered that the christian god gave man (humans, men and women), and man only, free will. No other creature has free will. Now all of a sudden Satan has it-- this is suspect that you only say that to prove your point, without any substantiation but hearsay which serves the skewed version of the true logic that your argument so stubbornly (but unsuccessfully) keeps on trying to defy.