commonsense wrote: ↑Sun Aug 30, 2020 11:51 pm
Yes, if the world were good, there wouldn’t be any evil. But it is not, and some things are evil.
Well, that sure calls for a question or two, doesn't it?
Like, "Is this world really something that contains evil, or is 'evil' just a word we use to describe things that are "inconvenient"? But then again, why should anything be "inconvenient," when it might have been otherwise? It's a very odd fact that we find the world is somehow "against us" in some ways; why should it be so?
And what about the evils men do? For even if there were not these strange oppositional forces we find in the world and call 'evil,' there are surely enough cases in hand of human beings taking the opportunity to harm each other, aren't there? So where does that impulse come from?
Murder is evil as it displeases normal people.
Well, we've got loaded terms here.
Which "people"? What's "normal," and who gets to say? How serious is it to "displease" a person? And what if, for some reason, an action that was formerly displeasing, like genocide, becomes not-displeasing, as it did to so many in the Third Reich? What if the majority is in favour of propagandizing or killing children...does its normalcy excuse it morally as well, and make it good?
That's a pretty shaky definition for evil, isn't it?
On the other hand, pleasure is good because it feels good.
Hmmm.
Heroin, I hear, feels really good. Prostitution might feel good. Pornography feels good to those drawn to it. Being drunk out of one's mind feels good. And sometimes, beating another person up, if you really, really didn't like him, is reported to feel good too. Are we sure we want to call all such things good?
Then we have the old consequentialist problem: what if I have to do some evil (like, say, embezzle) in order to get some pleasure (like being wealthy, having a big house and a boat, and having no problem providing for my family and having the admiration of many friends). Does the pleasure I get justify what I have to do to get it?