Why do most philosophers never agree with each other? If god doesn't exist and he's a human invention then how poor was our imagination, how pathetic was our morals and how great was our ignorance that we could do no better than a god that Richard Dawkins can describe in such disgustingly vile terms. — TheMadFool
This is something I find myself thinking about whenever debating the Problem of Evil. Theists fall all over themselves to make excuses for why the world can be as shitty as it is and yet God can still somehow be all-knowing, all-powerful, and most of all all-loving. I see that and just find myself wondering why you would even care whether or not there exists a being that, for whatever excuse or other, still permits genocides and children being sold into sex slavery, never mind horrible diseases and parasites and predators that are not even human fault, and otherwise appears to have no noticeable effect on the world. What comfort is that? That you go get to live in some afterlife later... managed by the same "all-loving" being who lets this life be such shit for so many? Why would that life be any better than this one then?
I can easily imagine a God that's much better than that, but that better kind of a God clearly isn't real, whatever the case may be about the lackluster type theists try to prop up.
People paint atheists like me as hating the idea of God or something, but really I'm terribly disappointed that there doesn't appear to be one, at least not anything that would rightly be considered an all-loving, all-knowing, all-powerful God. Sure maybe the universe as we know it is something like a simulation created by something like an alien that's all-knowing and all-powerful over what we think is reality and forever hidden from our ability to tell whether or not he's there... but why would I care, if he lets it be like this and otherwise makes himself irrelevant to us here?
The best I can hope for is that eventually enough of us will get similarly disappointed enough that there isn't such a God that we'll collectively decide to make or become one.
ETA: I'm disappointed that this thread isn't about the progress (or lack thereof) in philosophy, as the title would suggest.