The Problem of Evil and the Free Will defence.

SLAM: debunk creationism, pseudoscience, and superstitions. Discuss logic and morality.

Moderator: Alyrium Denryle

User avatar
Patrick Degan
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 14847
Joined: 2002-07-15 08:06am
Location: Orleanian in exile

Post by Patrick Degan »

Gandalf wrote:
Zadius wrote:There are still morally neutral things to contrast with it for one thing.
And how do you define good, without also making evil?

If you define a "good" act as something positive, then by use of the term positive, there has to be a negative.
And there we come to the crux of the matter. Good and Evil define one another; the one cannot exist without the other and vice-versa and presumably both are fundamental to the alleged god's creation. Therefore, the desire to eliminate Evil from the world would, in essence, be a desire to eliminate the world.

If Good and Evil cannot exist outside the mutual context provided in the very fabric of creation, it follows that neither can be eliminated without also destroying creation itself, which cancels out the alleged god's omnipotence by definition. If the alleged god had created his little universe and found later that Evil, which wasn't part of his plan, had sprung into being despite his effort to avoid it, that cancels out omnicience by definition.

In short: Good and Evil are mutuallly interdependent, while Omnipotence and Omnicience —as well as Good/Evil and Omnipotence/Omnicience— are mutually exclusive, qualities.

Of course, we can always quote industrialist S.R. Hadden on the matter:
You see, the religious people —most of them— really think this planet is an experiment. That's what their beliefs come down to. Some god or other is always fixing and poking, messing around with tradesmen's wives, giving tablets on mountains, commanding you to mutilate your children, telling people what words they can say and what words they can't say, making people feel guilty about enjoying themselves, and like that. Why can't the gods leave well enough alone? All this intervention speaks of incompetence. If God didn't want Lot's wife to look back, why didn't he make her obedient, so she'd do what her huband told her? Or if he hadn't made Lot such a shithead, maybe she would have listened to him more. If God is omnipotent and omnicient, why didn't he start the universe out in the first place so it would come out the way he wants? Why's he constantly repairing and complaining? No, there's one thing the Bible makes clear: The biblical God is a sloppy manufacturer. He's not good at design, he's not good at execution. He'd be out of business if there was any competition.

(Carl Sagan, Contact)
When ballots have fairly and constitutionally decided, there can be no successful appeal back to bullets.
—Abraham Lincoln

People pray so that God won't crush them like bugs.
—Dr. Gregory House

Oil an emergency?! It's about time, Brigadier, that the leaders of this planet of yours realised that to remain dependent upon a mineral slime simply doesn't make sense.
—The Doctor "Terror Of The Zygons" (1975)
User avatar
Zadius
Jedi Knight
Posts: 713
Joined: 2005-07-18 10:09pm
Location: Quad-Cities, Iowa, USA

Post by Zadius »

Gandalf wrote:
Zadius wrote:There are still morally neutral things to contrast with it for one thing.
And how do you define good, without also making evil?

If you define a "good" act as something positive, then by use of the term positive, there has to be a negative.
Of course we can define evil, but just because we can define it does not make it possible to actually do. I can define slower than light travel and faster than light travel, but as far as we can tell the latter is impossible. By definition, and omnipotent god should be capable of making evil acts impossible too.
Image
User avatar
Lord Woodlouse
Mister Zaia
Posts: 2357
Joined: 2002-07-04 04:09pm
Location: A Bigger Room
Contact:

Post by Lord Woodlouse »

Zero132132 wrote: Still, he's punishing humans for inadequecies that he hardwired into them. It's still immoral, and furthermore, fucking stupid for a being who can know the entirety of the future before it begins. Or will you next shift your definition of God to one that isn't omniscient?
Hardwired is the wrong word. We're capable of these inadequacies, we're not predestined to act on them. It's my belief that God knows every possible future. Otherwise this would be inconsistent, in my mind, with freedom of choice.

How is it our responsibility? This God fucker is omniscient, and he created the universe, so he knew the eventualities of whatever initial conditions he began the world with. He set up the initial conditions, and all things afterwards were and are his responsibility.
If a man knows a thing will happen does that automatically mean he's responsible for it happening?

The preconditions (and I think many Christians will argue on where those preconditions begin) include the capacity for good and bad. Neither is hardwired. No more than America's capacity to nuke other nations makes it inevitable that it will do so.

I don't believe in fate.

Omnipresent or not, he still must be one silly son of a bitch to bother judging actions he caused by standards he invented .
*shrug* They're not entirely alien standards to the human race.


Choice can't exist in a universe with a being who knows the definite future, and who manipulated the initial conditions so as to controll all actions in the universe.
I don't think he DOES control all actions in the universe. I think he is able to. I would compare it to a human building a cage for a hamster and putting a hamster in it. He can take it out, he can put food in it, and he can even destroy the cage should he wants to. But he does not need to for the cage to continue existing or the hamster to continue to live.

As I say, I don't believe in fate. I don't think any of our actions are predestined. Though I do think God is aware of every choice we might make, and the exact probability of those choices.

In a universe with an omniscient god who set up all the rules himself, there is nothing that isn't dictated.
In so much as the rules of law in our nations directly control our decisions. They influence them a helluva lot, sure. Some say unfairly, and to the detriment of our freedom. But at the end of the day we're still quite physically able to break those laws.
Check out TREKWARS (not involving furries!)

EVIL BRIT CONSPIRACY: Son of York; bringing glorious summer to the winter of your discontent.

KNIGHTS ASTRUM CLADES: I am a holy knight! Or something rhyming with knight, anyway...
User avatar
Lord Woodlouse
Mister Zaia
Posts: 2357
Joined: 2002-07-04 04:09pm
Location: A Bigger Room
Contact:

Post by Lord Woodlouse »

DPDarkPrimus wrote:
Lord Woodlouse wrote:
Keevan_Colton wrote:The judgement thing just brings us back to a God playing a sick little game.
If he's doing it purely for his own benefit, absolutely. I believe he does it for ours.
It's for our benefit that he sends us to Hell?
To our benefit that our decisions are our own.

I don't even believe Hell exists (except as figuratively speaking, naturally).
Check out TREKWARS (not involving furries!)

EVIL BRIT CONSPIRACY: Son of York; bringing glorious summer to the winter of your discontent.

KNIGHTS ASTRUM CLADES: I am a holy knight! Or something rhyming with knight, anyway...
User avatar
Lord Woodlouse
Mister Zaia
Posts: 2357
Joined: 2002-07-04 04:09pm
Location: A Bigger Room
Contact:

Post by Lord Woodlouse »

DPDarkPrimus wrote:
Lord Woodlouse wrote:
Keevan_Colton wrote:The judgement thing just brings us back to a God playing a sick little game.
If he's doing it purely for his own benefit, absolutely. I believe he does it for ours.
It's for our benefit that he sends us to Hell?
To our benefit that our decisions are our own.

I don't even believe Hell exists (except as figuratively speaking, naturally).
Check out TREKWARS (not involving furries!)

EVIL BRIT CONSPIRACY: Son of York; bringing glorious summer to the winter of your discontent.

KNIGHTS ASTRUM CLADES: I am a holy knight! Or something rhyming with knight, anyway...
Duckie
Sith Marauder
Posts: 3980
Joined: 2003-08-28 08:16pm

Post by Duckie »

Lord Woodlouse wrote:
Zero132132 wrote: Still, he's punishing humans for inadequecies that he hardwired into them. It's still immoral, and furthermore, fucking stupid for a being who can know the entirety of the future before it begins. Or will you next shift your definition of God to one that isn't omniscient?
Hardwired is the wrong word. We're capable of these inadequacies, we're not predestined to act on them. It's my belief that God knows every possible future. Otherwise this would be inconsistent, in my mind, with freedom of choice.
Naturally, as omniscient, God knows the position and speed of every particle in the universe. By definition he as omniscient must thus also be able to collumate this data into a perfect, Calvinistic fated representation of the universe.

Free will is nothing but electricity moving inside your brain. God should be able to calculate the flow of electrons and the factors effecting their movement and translate that into your actions with ease, as he is both Omniscient and Omnipotent.

How is it our responsibility? This God fucker is omniscient, and he created the universe, so he knew the eventualities of whatever initial conditions he began the world with. He set up the initial conditions, and all things afterwards were and are his responsibility.
If a man knows a thing will happen does that automatically mean he's responsible for it happening?
[/quote]
If he is able to prevent it. God, as an Omnipotent being, can prevent all evil.
The preconditions (and I think many Christians will argue on where those preconditions begin) include the capacity for good and bad. Neither is hardwired. No more than America's capacity to nuke other nations makes it inevitable that it will do so.

I don't believe in fate.
Believe in it or not, if God can violate the Heisenburg Indeterminancy then he knows all fates of everything.

Omnipresent or not, he still must be one silly son of a bitch to bother judging actions he caused by standards he invented .
*shrug* They're not entirely alien standards to the human race.
[/quote]
How does this matter when God still allows evil as WE, his greatest creation in his image and pet project, define it?

Choice can't exist in a universe with a being who knows the definite future, and who manipulated the initial conditions so as to controll all actions in the universe.
I don't think he DOES control all actions in the universe. I think he is able to. I would compare it to a human building a cage for a hamster and putting a hamster in it. He can take it out, he can put food in it, and he can even destroy the cage should he wants to. But he does not need to for the cage to continue existing or the hamster to continue to live.

As I say, I don't believe in fate. I don't think any of our actions are predestined. Though I do think God is aware of every choice we might make, and the exact probability of those choices.
[/quote]
How could an infinitely powerful being not control all actions? To say anything could escape the notice of an omniscient being, to resist an omnipotent being, is a paradox.

I've discussed my thoughts on Heisenburg and God above in relation to fate. If God is truly Omniscient, he does not need probability.
In a universe with an omniscient god who set up all the rules himself, there is nothing that isn't dictated.
In so much as the rules of law in our nations directly control our decisions. They influence them a helluva lot, sure. Some say unfairly, and to the detriment of our freedom. But at the end of the day we're still quite physically able to break those laws.[/quote]
Yet our nations are not irresistable, omnipotent entities that we cannot even fathom. God should be able to have compliance to his own rules with less than an erg of effort.
Duckie
Sith Marauder
Posts: 3980
Joined: 2003-08-28 08:16pm

Post by Duckie »

Holy shit, how did I fuck up that quote bar so much? That's two "Preview, dumbass" mistakes today.
User avatar
Zero
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2023
Joined: 2005-05-02 10:55pm
Location: Trying to find the divide between real memories and false ones.

Post by Zero »

Lord Woodlouse wrote:Hardwired is the wrong word. We're capable of these inadequacies, we're not predestined to act on them. It's my belief that God knows every possible future. Otherwise this would be inconsistent, in my mind, with freedom of choice.
If it's simply possibilities, then the other element is random, variable, and still not up to human action; God is still more responsible for a human's actions, in this scenario, than the human.
Lord Woodlouse wrote:If a man knows a thing will happen does that automatically mean he's responsible for it happening?
No, and I never suggested it was. It is, however, his fault if he knows in advance the consequence or potential consequences of his actions.

[quote="Lord Woodlouse"The preconditions (and I think many Christians will argue on where those preconditions begin) include the capacity for good and bad. Neither is hardwired. No more than America's capacity to nuke other nations makes it inevitable that it will do so.
[/quote]

This is a bad analogy. If the US nukes other nations, it's because of the decisions of a head executive. This executive is, himself, influenced by other events. The capacity for using nuclear weapons is only one of several preconditions for actually using them. Conversely, under the system you've proposed, whether the US nukes or doesn't is based entirely on variability. The capacity is the only precondition, and whether it happens or not is simply random.
Lord Woodlouse wrote: I don't believe in fate.
In a universe featuring a diety who's supposed to know everything, it would seem impossible that it shouldn't be so. If he simply knew the possible outcomes, then what of the prophesies in the bible? According to you, is revelations only one possibility among infinite possible ways for the world to end?
Lord Woodlouse wrote: I don't think he DOES control all actions in the universe. I think he is able to. I would compare it to a human building a cage for a hamster and putting a hamster in it. He can take it out, he can put food in it, and he can even destroy the cage should he wants to. But he does not need to for the cage to continue existing or the hamster to continue to live.

As I say, I don't believe in fate. I don't think any of our actions are predestined. Though I do think God is aware of every choice we might make, and the exact probability of those choices.
If you design a computer program with specific rules, you're the only one who can be given credit for the outcomes of the program.

Similarly, if you design a universe with specific physical laws and rules that dictate behavior of various beings you're judging, even if variability in decision is hardwired into the universe, you can't blame the beings themselves, because they can't choose whatever random variables decide their actions. If they can, what do they base this decision off of?

If you claim that there are possibilities, but not certainties, then human actions boil down to probabilities, and you can't really condemn anyone for choosing one action over another, because it's just based on randomness. If you say it's somehow based on his character, than his character must also be based on something, so it boils down either to determinism, with god setting up all the rules, or probabilities simply hidden somewhere else, like in determining the value of someone's character, so that character can in turn decide what actions a person makes or doesn't make. Either way, God's the one who set up the system, and whatever outcomes there are can only be credited to him.
Lord Woodlouse wrote: In so much as the rules of law in our nations directly control our decisions. They influence them a helluva lot, sure. Some say unfairly, and to the detriment of our freedom. But at the end of the day we're still quite physically able to break those laws.
When I said laws, I meant physical laws of the universe, and the four forces that dictate what all matter does in the universe. These laws, we can't break. I can't simply decide that gravity isn't valid, and go to the moon at twice the speed of light while telling Einstien to go fuck himself. I could go murder someone, which would break a law, but that wasn't the kind of law I meant. Sorry for the misunderstanding.
So long, and thanks for all the fish
User avatar
Zero
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2023
Joined: 2005-05-02 10:55pm
Location: Trying to find the divide between real memories and false ones.

Post by Zero »

Bah... everyone makes mistakes. Any mod want to fix my quote tags, and those of MRDOD?
So long, and thanks for all the fish
User avatar
DPDarkPrimus
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 18399
Joined: 2002-11-22 11:02pm
Location: Iowa
Contact:

Post by DPDarkPrimus »

Lord Woodlouse wrote:
DPDarkPrimus wrote:
Lord Woodlouse wrote: If he's doing it purely for his own benefit, absolutely. I believe he does it for ours.
It's for our benefit that he sends us to Hell?
To our benefit that our decisions are our own.

I don't even believe Hell exists (except as figuratively speaking, naturally).
What does that mean, "figuratively speaking"?
Mayabird is my girlfriend
Justice League:BotM:MM:SDnet City Watch:Cybertron's Finest
"Well then, science is bullshit. "
-revprez, with yet another brilliant rebuttal.
User avatar
wolveraptor
Sith Marauder
Posts: 4042
Joined: 2004-12-18 06:09pm

Post by wolveraptor »

Anytime someone says we have free will, I remind them that according to their religion, god created our personalities, our upbringings and the circumstances in which we would make our choices; essentially, he creates the attributes that will determine what decisions we make, indirectly choosing things for us.
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."

- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock
User avatar
Lord Woodlouse
Mister Zaia
Posts: 2357
Joined: 2002-07-04 04:09pm
Location: A Bigger Room
Contact:

Post by Lord Woodlouse »

MRDOD: I hope to come back to address your points at some point, at the moment I'm doing some research on just how predictable the universe can (theoretically) be. I've always been under the impression that while the universe can be predicted to exact probability, to the point of virtually being predictable, it's not possible to predict everything perfectly even on a theoretical level. But, as I say, I don't know enough on the subject to reliably debate the point with you at the moment. :)

Zero raised some points I think I can more reliably address, so I'll see how I go with those for now...
Zero132132 wrote:If it's simply possibilities, then the other element is random, variable, and still not up to human action; God is still more responsible for a human's actions, in this scenario, than the human.
Not random. We're still in control of our decisions, even if we're more likely to choose a certain direction. An alchoholic is far more likely to take another drink than not, but he's still more than capable of not doing so.
No, and I never suggested it was. It is, however, his fault if he knows in advance the consequence or potential consequences of his actions.
If he knows inevitable consequences, sure. But not potential consequences. He takes a certain responsibility, but not all of it. The decisions, afterall, are ours.

This is a bad analogy. If the US nukes other nations, it's because of the decisions of a head executive. This executive is, himself, influenced by other events. The capacity for using nuclear weapons is only one of several preconditions for actually using them. Conversely, under the system you've proposed, whether the US nukes or doesn't is based entirely on variability. The capacity is the only precondition, and whether it happens or not is simply random.
Humans make decisions based on a number of variables in life. They deal with things in different ways. But those decisions are still their own, even if they might be predisposed to make one decision or another. Humans have instincts the same as any other animal, but the thing that sets us apart is that we're not ruled by those instincts. We're capable of overuling our instincts and making decisions that go against our inate nature.

In a universe featuring a diety who's supposed to know everything, it would seem impossible that it shouldn't be so. If he simply knew the possible outcomes, then what of the prophesies in the bible? According to you, is revelations only one possibility among infinite possible ways for the world to end?
Revelations is an event precipitated by non-human entities. Either by God himself, or "Satan" and the "Antichrist". These are infinitely more predictable because they are pure good or pure evil.

If you design a computer program with specific rules, you're the only one who can be given credit for the outcomes of the program.
If I create a machine that randomly generates numbers between 1 and 100, am I responsible for it generating a 7 or is it?

God made us, yes. He gave us the capacity for good and evil. But that choice is still ours, nothing ever forces us to make one choice over another.
Similarly, if you design a universe with specific physical laws and rules that dictate behavior of various beings you're judging, even if variability in decision is hardwired into the universe, you can't blame the beings themselves, because they can't choose whatever random variables decide their actions. If they can, what do they base this decision off of?
They can use their own mind to consider the consequences of their actions. Humans are the main unpredictable variable I'm talking about here.
If you claim that there are possibilities, but not certainties, then human actions boil down to probabilities, and you can't really condemn anyone for choosing one action over another, because it's just based on randomness. If you say it's somehow based on his character, than his character must also be based on something, so it boils down either to determinism, with god setting up all the rules, or probabilities simply hidden somewhere else, like in determining the value of someone's character, so that character can in turn decide what actions a person makes or doesn't make. Either way, God's the one who set up the system, and whatever outcomes there are can only be credited to him.
Not randomness at all. Humans don't automatically make decisions, fated or based on random chance. They weigh up the factors and make a decision. Sometimes they can't even do that, they're left with so much indecision. All humans are predisposed to certain actions, and most actions will make other actions more or less probable. But hardly any make them inevitable.

Addictive drugs will increase the probability of a person taking the same drug again. But that person is able to think about their decisions, and go against their instinct to take the drug again and through sheer force of will stop themselves.

When I said laws, I meant physical laws of the universe, and the four forces that dictate what all matter does in the universe. These laws, we can't break. I can't simply decide that gravity isn't valid, and go to the moon at twice the speed of light while telling Einstien to go fuck himself. I could go murder someone, which would break a law, but that wasn't the kind of law I meant. Sorry for the misunderstanding.
Ah, fair enough, but do these laws effect our mind's capacity for free thought?
Check out TREKWARS (not involving furries!)

EVIL BRIT CONSPIRACY: Son of York; bringing glorious summer to the winter of your discontent.

KNIGHTS ASTRUM CLADES: I am a holy knight! Or something rhyming with knight, anyway...
User avatar
Lord Woodlouse
Mister Zaia
Posts: 2357
Joined: 2002-07-04 04:09pm
Location: A Bigger Room
Contact:

Post by Lord Woodlouse »

DPDarkPrimus wrote:
Lord Woodlouse wrote:
DPDarkPrimus wrote: It's for our benefit that he sends us to Hell?
To our benefit that our decisions are our own.

I don't even believe Hell exists (except as figuratively speaking, naturally).
What does that mean, "figuratively speaking"?
Exactly that. For a child school is often their hell. To an SBer like myself it might be SDN. :P

Those who don't go to heaven are said to be in torment, but that torment is merely the torment inherent in knowing they're not with God. It need not be painful or any such thing. It does not invalidate having a good time. It's comparitive. Like the torment I'm in right now for not being in Barbados lounging around on the beech. :)
Check out TREKWARS (not involving furries!)

EVIL BRIT CONSPIRACY: Son of York; bringing glorious summer to the winter of your discontent.

KNIGHTS ASTRUM CLADES: I am a holy knight! Or something rhyming with knight, anyway...
Duckie
Sith Marauder
Posts: 3980
Joined: 2003-08-28 08:16pm

Post by Duckie »

Lord Woodlouse wrote:MRDOD: I hope to come back to address your points at some point, at the moment I'm doing some research on just how predictable the universe can (theoretically) be. I've always been under the impression that while the universe can be predicted to exact probability, to the point of virtually being predictable, it's not possible to predict everything perfectly even on a theoretical level. But, as I say, I don't know enough on the subject to reliably debate the point with you at the moment. :)
Theoretical doesn't matter to God any more than wind resistance matters to a modder in a flight simulation. God made the Universe's physics engine, presumably he knows the rules.

What you are describing is Quantum Mechanics in a nutshell. We can get really, really close to predicting events, but there's always tiny uncertainties mainly caused by Heisenburg's Indeterminancy Principle and also on a much lesser scale by the fact that at a low enough scale particles can in certain situations violate the laws of physics as we know them (a confusing concept to me too).

Further, our understanding of physics is hampered by the lack of a Theory of Everything to unify Gravity with the GUT, which so far looks to be String Theory or one of its other 31 flavours.

The point is that God has none of these faults. First off, he made the Universe. Second off, even if he doesn't technically have to understand the universe to make it, he still is omniscient.

Now, since God is omniscient, he naturally must be able to know both the position and velocity of an electron (for instance) at the same time lest his infinite knowledge not really be infinite. Thus, he now can forecast the path of that electron with perfect certainty, unlike modern, laws-of-physics obeying mortals.

Now, as Omnipotent, he can repeat this process instantly for everything in the universe and determine all forces between everything and everything else, like some sort of gigantic atomic round-robin tournament. Presumably he even can watch String themselves or whatever is below Quarks that we are still theorizing, which should take care of the uncertain randomness of Quantum Mechanics itself. Even if he couldn't, he is Omniscient so he must know which ones are going to perform unexpectedly under classical or relativistic mechanics on a quantum scale anyhow. Not a single atom can thus move in an unexpected manner if God is truly Omniscient.

Since he now knows what every single atom in the universe will do, he essentially knows the future. He can even plot the courses of electrical currents in your brain so as to determine your actions. He can also do that for everyone else, too.

Thus, God knows a 100% deterministic universe.

If this scenario seems absurd, just think. God himself is a No Limits Fallacy.
User avatar
DPDarkPrimus
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 18399
Joined: 2002-11-22 11:02pm
Location: Iowa
Contact:

Post by DPDarkPrimus »

Lord Woodlouse wrote: Those who don't go to heaven are said to be in torment, but that torment is merely the torment inherent in knowing they're not with God. It need not be painful or any such thing. It does not invalidate having a good time. It's comparitive. Like the torment I'm in right now for not being in Barbados lounging around on the beech. :)
"Torment" is not a word that would have been used lightly in the Bible. Your interpretation somehow seems to be a bit more lenient than it was intended to be.
Mayabird is my girlfriend
Justice League:BotM:MM:SDnet City Watch:Cybertron's Finest
"Well then, science is bullshit. "
-revprez, with yet another brilliant rebuttal.
Post Reply