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06-08-2003, 08:52 AM | #251 | ||
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06-08-2003, 09:31 AM | #252 | |
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06-10-2003, 12:29 AM | #253 | ||
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There are a couple of points that I need to clear up. Omnibenevolence is often defined as "all good" but I have a problem with that definition. First of all, what is meant by good? Good and evil are completely meaningless without a reference point, much in the same way that right and left, or above and below, are meaningless without a reference point. Pain and pleasure, on the other hand, doesn't need a reference point. Finally, I don't see why the infliction of pain and suffering is necessarily evil. I can think of examples where the infliction of pain and suffering would be a good thing. For example, would it not be a good thing to inflict pain and suffering upon someone who was trying to rape your daughter? |
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06-10-2003, 07:26 AM | #254 | |
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Do you mean "inflict pain and suffering" as a means to condition them not to try it again? If so, I don't think that's a very effective method. If you mean "good for me", well, it might give me some primal satisfaction (albeit fleeting), but I would hardly call it "a good thing". |
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06-10-2003, 09:12 AM | #255 | |||
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Is ALL infliction of pain and suffering necessarily evil? That is the question. You are not answering my question. Quote:
The question wasn't whether or not it would be an effective method or not. The question is whether or not ALL infliction of pain and suffering is necessarily evil? Quote:
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06-10-2003, 09:40 AM | #256 | |
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It isn't good to inflict pain and suffering. Because that is the only option available to us at times to stop OTHER pain and suffering, we weigh the two against each other and do which one causes us or someone we care about the least amount of pain and suffering. An omnipotent god wouldn't have this limitation. |
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06-10-2003, 11:13 AM | #257 | ||||
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I do get to that question, but I wanted to clarify that the "good" act in relation to the situation is connected to the "evil" (rape) and not the person. Therefore, I would want to address the evil by preventing it. Quote:
If you ignore the intent and consequences, then by what measure are you defining it as "good" or "evil"? Quote:
This scenario is considerably more specific than the general question I first answered. Trying to save your daughter was indeed a good thing. The intent was good, but the consequences were not (as you died in the process, and it is possible that you're daughter was subsequently raped in any case - a grisly scenario that I'd rather not think about too much). Your goal, however, was not to cause pain but to dissuade the attacker and save your daughter. It becomes rather meaningless, therefore, to talk about "good" and "evil" in this case. I will stress, though, that if you had the ability to successfully complete your task without causing pain, then to do so would have been "evil". Quote:
As I have said elsewhere, "evil", as I understand it relative to the wolrd we leave in, is an act that interferes with the maintenance of a sustainable society. (Well, it's a little more complicated than that, but that's the gist of it) I believe that is our reference point - and it is a moving one. This doesn't connect well to an "omni" being, because the desired product - a sustainable society - is one that I see for mankind based on biology. But if an omnimax god existed, I would argue the desired product would be sheer bliss, meaning that "evil" and "good" would have very different definitions, and that promulgating good would require different actions. |
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06-10-2003, 11:22 AM | #258 | |
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Originally posted by NonContradiction :
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06-10-2003, 10:46 PM | #259 | |
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If God isn't all-good because He doesn't prevent evil, then it follows that He would be all-good if He were to prevent evil. By a standard independent of God, you deem God not to be all-good for not preventing evil. Similarly, it follows, by a standard independent of God, you would also deem God to be all-good if He were to prevent evil. However, the problem is that if God were to prevent evil, then no standard of good and evil independent of God would exist, so how could you deem God to be all-good for preventing evil? |
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06-11-2003, 03:33 AM | #260 | |
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Besides, if it is for some reason important to an all good god that we deem him all good, he could simply tell us that he is all good or instill us with the ability to distinguish good from evil. |
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