Of course. But one with an explanation that makes sense, of course. Not an insoluble problem at all. But insoluble for the Atheist. For the Atheist, bad things are still as bad as they are for the Theist, but the Atheist has no access to the means of understanding any reasons or explanations for any of it.phyllo wrote: ↑Fri Feb 20, 2026 10:21 pmEvil is a problem for theists who claim that God is all-loving and/or all-good.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Feb 20, 2026 10:04 pmWhy not?
I'm perfectly happy to talk about how Theists view the explanations for the existence of evil. But if evil is a problem for Theists, it's also a problem for everybody else, too. After all, we all live with the existence of evil. Why is Atheism being given a "pass" on this universal problem? And why should the skeptics get to pick on the Theists, while remaining artificially immune to facing it themselves? How is that equitable? How is that even reasonable?
But the problem, or course, is that Atheism's got nothing. Theists have answers, at least for themselves, if not to the delight of the skeptics. But Atheism and its cluster of godless fellow-beliefs, they've got no answer, no information, not even a hint. They are a gelding, on this question...no fruitful answers at all.
Now, you may not want to talk about the Atheists. But if you're fair-minded, you certainly should. The problem exists equally, on all sides.
The Theist is a person who understands what cancer is, and what the treatment involves. The Atheist still has the cancer, but no diagnosis, and absolutely no means of treatment. How is he better off?
So who really has the problem of evil? I suggest that it's the Atheist, far more than the Theist, who has the real problem.