1 / 14

The Problem of Evil

The Problem of Evil. The Relationship of Good and Evil. Dualism: Good and Evil are opposing forces, both having real existence Zoroaster, Mani Monism: God is the only true power Isaiah 45: “I make the light; I create darkness, author alike of prosperity and trouble” Augustine, Aquinas.

lael
Download Presentation

The Problem of Evil

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Problem of Evil

  2. The Relationship of Good and Evil • Dualism: Good and Evil are opposing forces, both having real existence • Zoroaster, Mani • Monism: God is the only true power • Isaiah 45: “I make the light; I create darkness, author alike of prosperity and trouble” • Augustine, Aquinas

  3. The Problem of Evil • A problem for the monist (Aquinas, Anselm, and Paley) • The only power is the good power • The traditional Judeo-Christian conception of God: • All powerful • All good • All knowing

  4. Two kinds of evil • The suffering that arises from human choices • (human sin and its consequences) • The suffering that results from events in the natural world • Animal suffering not caused by humans • Suffering that results from natural disasters

  5. The argument • God = the all-PKG being • If God is all-powerful, He can prevent evil • If God is all-good, He does not wish for evil to occur • If God is all-knowing, He knows about evil’s existence, and knows how to prevent it

  6. But evil exists

  7. Therefore, the all-PKG being does not exist • Possible responses to this argument: • Evil does not exist (seems implausible) • God exists, but is not all-PKG (plausible) • A theodicy (reject the argument)

  8. Theodicy • Coined by Leibniz as a name for a solution to the problem of evil • Theos = god • Dike = righteous, just

  9. Augustine: three responses Some natural evil is really instrumental good • E.g. going to the dentist • (and thus isn’t really evil) Some natural evil exists as “privation” or “corruption” • The “failure” of a corruptible being (e.g. blindness) • This is really the absence of good, not an “existence”

  10. Augustine’s third response Moral evil comes about because of the fall of angelic and human beings • The “free-will defense” • For Augustine, Adam was free to not sin, but did • We are now slaves to sin, and the suffering that results from it

  11. Problems for Augustine? • The “self-creation” of evil: how did evil first enter the universe? • Hell as eternal torment: what possible purpose could this serve?

  12. Aquinas and ‘Double Effect’ • Unintended evil results from pursuit of the good • God always pursues the good • Therefore evil is always a ‘double effect’, not intended by God • And since evil is always a ‘lack’ (a non-existence of some good), God does not bring it about (except in pursuit of divine justice)

  13. So why is there ‘evil’? • In the moral realm • the deprivation of one good for the sake of another as a result of the free will of human beings • Also, as the punishment of sin (willed by God) • In the natural world • the deprivation of one good for the sake of another in the natural world

  14. Problems for Aquinas? • In the moral realm • If we always in fact pursue the good we perceive, can we really sin? Aren’t we just in error when we do something wrong? • In the natural world • How are phenomena like animal pain and natural disasters justified by the doctrine of double effect?

More Related