2A Problem of Evil and Suffering Flashcards

1
Q

What is evil?

A

Anything that causes suffering

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2
Q

What is moral evil? Give three examples.

A
  • Suffering brought about through the actions of a free will-agent.
  • Murder, rape, terrorism
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3
Q

What is natural evil? Give three examples.

A
  • Suffering brought about through events outside of the control of free-will agents; most commonly occurring as part of the natural order.
  • Earthquake, tsunami, disease
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4
Q

Why is evil a challenge to the God of Classical Theism? (Basic answer)

A
  • Followers believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-loving creator of the universe, but evil does not fit comfortably with human experience.
  • Why does creation suffer appalling extremes if God has these qualities?
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5
Q

Who is associated with the classical problem of evil? Give a quote from him.

A
  • Epicurus.

* “If he wants to, but cannot, he is impotent. If he can, but does not want to, he is wicked.”

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6
Q

What are the three components to the inconsistent triad?

A

• Omnipotence, omnibenevolence, evil exists: logically inconsistent for all three statements to exist simultaneously

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7
Q

Who is the inconsistent triad associated with?

A

John L. Mackie

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8
Q

Triad: If God was omnipotent, he…

A
  • Would have the power to remove evil
  • Could have created a world w/o evil
  • Would have “unqualified omnipotence”, incorporating omniscience: omnipotence w/o any restrictions due to constraints of the world
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9
Q

Triad: If God was omnibenevolent, he…

A
  • Would remove evil so that creation does not suffer

* Idea that he would tolerate evil/suffering = anathema to concept of omnibenevolence

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10
Q

Triad: Does evil exist?

A

• Existence is so tangible in its effect and scope that any denial of its existence would be nonsensical

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11
Q

What is a possible solution to the inconsitent triad?

A

Remove one of the three points.

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12
Q

Triad: What are the effects of removing omnipotence?

A
  • He wants to remove evil but does not have the power, ∴ we can see why evil exists
  • Process theologians believe that God was part of the universe ∴ while he started the evolutionary process, he does not have the power to remove evil (regarded as “The fellow sufferer who understands”)
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13
Q

Triad: What is the problem of removing omnipotence?

A

God = responsible for creating the universe ex nihilo ∴ is greater than the universe

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14
Q

Triad: What are the effects of removing omnibenevolence?

A

• Having the power does not mean he wants to
• Why should he care if his creation suffers?
∴ Considered malicious and may enjoy seeing his creation suffer

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15
Q

Triad: What is the problem of removing omnibenevolence?

A

• So far from the imagination of all Classical theistic religions

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16
Q

Triad: What is the effect of removing ‘evil exists’?

A
  • Our preception is wrong, we cannot see that suffering has a purpose and ∴ is not evil
  • Some ‘evils’ are better than actual evil, e.g smacking a child’s hand away from a boiling pot
17
Q

Triad: What is the problem of removing ‘evil exists’?

A

Effects of evil are too widely felt to be dismissable

18
Q

What is Mackie’s ‘Paradox of Omnipotence’?

A

Theists maintain that there are no limits to what an omnipotent being can do, but the solutions/theodicies limit God’s power while misleadingly keeping the term omnipotence ∴ changed premise

19
Q

Mackie: “Can an omnipotent being make things which he subsequently cannot control? Or…make rules which then bind himself?”

A
  • “Cannot be answered satisfactorily in either the affirmative or the negative”:
  • Yes: “He is not omnipotent once he has made them.”
  • No: “immediately asserting that there are things which he cannot do [∴] He is already not omnipotent.”
20
Q

What is the only solution to the ‘Paradox of Omnipotence’? What is the problem of this?

A
  • “Deny that God is a continuing being” or “by putting God outside time”
  • Any solution to the problem of evil that involves free will is immediately compromised
21
Q

What is Aquinas’ response to the problem of evil?

A
  • Our ‘goodness’/’evil’ may be different from God’s as ours is relative to time/culture whereas God is a perfect, immutable being ∴ his concepts of good/evil are likewise unchangeable
  • ∴ no logical contradiction in triad
  • ∴ omnipotence is not questioned
22
Q

Summarise William Rowe’s evidential problem of evil.

A
  • His approach involves consideration of whether, and to what extent, the existence of evil can be used as evidence to argue against God’s existence
  • Seems reasonable to allow limited suffering for growth/development but “intense” + animal suffering is not reasonable
  • If God = omnipotent+omniscient+omnibenevolent, He would know when suffering is about to take place and could/would want to prevent all suffering that does not have a purpose
  • As such evil/suffering exists, God probably does not exist.
23
Q

What example does William Rowe use to illustrate his point?

A

A fawn caught in a forest fire

24
Q

Summarise Gregory Paul’s statistical problem of evil.

A

• Estimated 50 billion children have died naturally before reaching “the age of mature consent” + 300 billion prenatal deaths (“The Holocaust of the children”)
• Millions of children die every year from natural/evil causes and they are too young to make choices about God.
• No all-loving, all-powerful being would permit this
God does not exist