bahman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 01, 2021 5:14 pm
What good is supposed to come from evil?
It's not actually so strange an idea as you might suppose. There are actually definite goods that are impossible if there were no evil, no suffering, no pain, and so forth, but which are possible because there are such things.
Let me give you a few simple examples. One is
achievement. One cannot be said to have
achieved something if one faced no difficulties, pains or struggles in having achieved it. Another is
mercy. There is no such thing as
mercy in a world in which nobody is ever in need. Likewise
charity, or
compassion, or
sacrifice. There is no
triumph if there are no obstacles.
But here is the item of present concern: there is no
freedom. To be morally free means to have the real option of choosing to do the good, or choosing to do "something else than" the good, which necessarily means some kind of bad. To be free to choose God is to be free to choose self instead, or even to choose the darkness. To be free to love a woman implies that you could have chosen others: if you had
no other choice, then in what is your love manifested? And to choose to make a person your friend is to choose him out of others, with whom you do not have the same commitment; or if you have the same level of commitment to all people, then in what sense is anybody your "friend"?
So you can see there are many goods which depend on the possibility, if not the actuality, of the not-good. And there are specific goods that proceed from the presence of suffering, pain, lack and so on.
God should not allow suffering to innocents. The end cannot justify the means.
We should think about what it means to be "innocent," then.
But a concern happens even before that. If God "should not" allow the suffering of innocents, what do we suppose he
should do instead?
Do we suppose that He ought to so ordain things that if bahman decides to kick his dog, the dog is suddenly removed from the area? And if bahman decides to steal from a friend, is God morally obligated to bar bahman's hand? And if bahman decides to sleep with a partner belonging to somebody else, is God under obligation to spirit that partner away, so that it cannot happen? Or if bahman decides to lie, is God obligated to tie bahman's tongue in knots, so the evil of the deception cannot creep out into the world and do damage?
Just how much evil, suffering or bad is a truly good God morally obligated, in your view, to prevent?