Dubious wrote: ↑Mon Aug 25, 2025 1:17 am
Dubious wrote: ↑Sat Aug 23, 2025 5:31 pmIf men, god's creation, can commit the most disgusting and heinous crimes imaginable, as they've always done, and god does absolutely nothing, then what good is god, any god?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Aug 23, 2025 7:49 pmLet me ask you: what do you suppose a good God should do, in view of that?
Let's stick to that theme!
Yes, let’s.
But do you have an answer? You say, “find a way.” Well, what, exactly would such a “way” look like? God could, for example, have shut down the world. Or He could have melted the faces of every Nazi. Or He could have turned all their weapons into harmless rubber. Or he could have endowed all Jews with superior strength, so they could wipe out their enemies… So there are many, many ways an infinite God could have prevented the Shoah. But some of them would entail things that could be worse than the Shoah itself, and others might have other consequences we might find unhelpful…but we won’t be able to assess that until we know what you’re advocating.
So again, what, exactly, do you expect that God should have done, if He is a good God?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Aug 23, 2025 7:49 pmHere, we already have a piece of your answer, it seems: that a good God would intervene immediately…but to do exactly what?
You've heard the old saying,
justice delayed is justice denied,
Yes, but it’s obviously not true. After all, all justice is “delayed” for some period of time, whether it’s minutes, hours, days, weeks, years or even millennia. That doesn’t imply that justice is impossible, or that it never arrives. So we can dismiss that.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Aug 23, 2025 7:49 pmSo the thesis that a good God could postpone justice is unacceptable to you, but the thesis that Nature, which knows nothing at all of justice, would postpone it forever is more acceptable to you?
Since there exists no power beyond nature, it's not a matter of what's acceptable but inevitable
in which any question of acceptance doesn't apply.
Well, this is a most unfortunate implication for your complaint. What it means is that, being a Naturalist, you don’t even believe there is such a thing as “justice,” far less any realism in your expectation that it should arrive. In which case, you’d lose all right to complain: how can you, if you don’t believe justice is possible, be upset if it doesn’t happen? It should be nothing other than what you expect.
But I think you’re wrong about that, of course; and I think we are owed some explanation of what “justice” requires. I even think you have a justification to ask for it…but I can’t say that your Naturalism gives you any similar grace. It seems to require you to give up on your complaint, since it cannot ground for you any conception of justice at all.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Aug 23, 2025 7:49 pmWell, we’ll have to be able to make the critique sensible, first. At the moment, it amounts to “the person who believes there’s no justice because there’s only Nature is mad at the God he doesn’t believe exists because he’s not getting any justice.” And that Gordian knot just has to be untied somehow.
There is no Gordian Knot except those which exist in nature...
That’s my point: a person who’s a Naturalist has no way to complain about injustice, and make sense of what he’s asking. Nature knows nothing of justice, and Nature does not promise any, nor does it even provide grounds for somebody to conceive of justice.
The distinction made is simplicity itself: what is the difference between an absentee god and just letting nature take its course where life means nothing because there's always more on the way, constant birth causing death to have equal priority. No consideration for any organism under its domain is what makes evolution so savage, but god, GOD, is supposed to be all-loving and moral...and yet in practice and as observed, we can't find a single difference between the two.
And again, we come back to that question we should never have left, and which you said at the start of this message you wanted us to stick to: what, exactly, are you implying God “should have done,” so to speak, in the case of the Shoah?
We might even wonder why the Shoah should be the test case, given that it wasn’t the worst set of murders in history. Stalin killed 22 million, at least, and Mao killed 42 million that we know of, and probably more. So we should also ask, did you only have a problem with God not stopping Hitler, or are you equally concerned about Stalin and Mao? And then we should ask, how far does that go? Should a good God not also stop lesser massacres, like the killing fields of Cambodia or the death camps of North Korea…and what about the smaller murders, like the shootings in Chicago or Detroit today, or the stabbings in London…and what about the rapes in Rotherham, or the school shootings in Canada…so just how far should this complaint go?
Maybe you can actually answer in the next message. “Find some way” seems not enough information here.