evaluation of the problems of evil Flashcards
defences
- only intended as a logically possible explanation as to why god permits evil
- explains a way in which gods existence might be compatible with the existence of evil
theodicy
- intended to be a plausible or reasonable explanation as to why god permits evil
how to respond to the logical problem of evil
a defence.
how to respond to the evidential problem of evil
a theodicy
logical problem of evil
- deductive argument
- if evil exists them gods existence is impossible
- evil and god are incompatible
the evidential problem of evil
- non-deductive
- if evil exists, then gods existence is highly unlikely
response 1 to the logical problem of evil
the free will defence
the free will defence
- plantinga
- there’s a possible explanation of evil which is compatible with theism
- evil is the result of the free will of human beings
- god creates creatures with free will because free will is so morally valuable that it is worth giving/preserving no matter how much evil it leads to
- god has done the morally right thing in giving us free will and we are the ones to blame for the existence of evil
this is how god can be omnibenevolent even though evil exists - god can create free creatures but god cannot cause or determine them to do only what it is right because if god does, then the humans are not free at all
counter-response to the free will defence 1
Mackie
mackie
- mackie argues that the free will defence fails because god could have made a world that had both free will and no evil.
- if so, free will cant possibly be gods justification for the existence of evil
- Mackie argues that it is logically possible for everyone to always freely choose to do morally right actions and therefore a world in which this happens if a possible world
- P1: There is a possible world where all free choices are good (i.e. non-evil) choices (i.e. where there is free will and no evil)
P2: For any possible world, an omnipotent God could have created it
P3: A world where there is free will and no evil is morally better than a world where there is free will and evil and so should be preferred by a wholly good God.
C1: Therefore, God’s existence is logically incompatible with the existence of evil (even the moral evil resulting from free will).
plantingas response to mackie
- the world mackie describes might not be a possible world
- consider the proposition A “Every possible free person goes wrong in every possible world that they exist in.”
- every free person creates by god would misuse their free will on at least 1 occasion no matter which world is that
- the may be highly implausible or even false, but it is logically possible.
- if A is possible then so is the following proposition B “ It was not within God’s power to create a world containing moral good but no moral evil.”
- it is possible that any world created by God that contains some moral good will also contain some moral evil..
- therefore Mackie was wrong to think that it is logically impossible for both God and evil to exist because it is possible that any world created by God would have some evil in it.
response to mackies counter-response 2
- it is a possible world but not one that god can guarantee
- one might agree that it is possible for all free choices by all human beings to be good choices.
- a world with free will and no evil is a possible world.
- however, whether such a world exists depends on the free decisions that humans make not god choosing to make it
- when god makes a world, he doesn’t know how it will turn out because of human freedom.
- so the world that mackie describes Is possible but cannot be guaranteed by god
counter-response for the free will defence 2
natural evil: some have argued that this defence cannot explain why there is natural evil because natural evil is mot the result of free choices made by humans
response to natural evil counter-response
natural evil might be required for us to have free will
- some have argued that in order for a world to exist in which different people can in some way freely choose to negatively affect each other there must be a possibility of physical/ natural evil
- the ability for people to cause evil to others relies on physical/natural causal connections which allow natural evil e.g. susie can punch the girl in the face as her fists is able to affect the other persons face But the same laws of science that allow this to happen also mean that if a tree were to fall on Tom’s face it would also cause him pain/injury. “
- in order for me to understand how I might feel when evil is occurred , I would need to learn about this through the presence of natural evil
e.g. Susie can only be free to choose whether to inflict pain on Tom because she has seen things such as trees falling which inflict pain.
- The overall idea here is that it might be impossible to have moral evil without also having natural evil. They come together. So if free will is morally good, and it requires natural evil, then natural evil can be justified.
Response to the eventual problem of evil
soul-making theodicy