In the middle of intense, prolonged suffering, we can have significant doubts about God's existence. Are these legitimate? How do we deal with them?
Philosophy of Evil
The Existential Problem of Evil
In the middle of intense, prolonged suffering, we can have significant doubts about God's existence. Are these legitimate? How do we deal with them?
NOTES
Further Reading
Problem of Evil and the Moral Argument
The Problem of Evil is intended to show that God does not exist, but interestingly enough one of the premises it rests on--indeed, the most surprising one--can be used to prove the exact opposite: the premise that "Evil exists." How can the existence of evil show God exists? Is there a way to avoid this result?
NOTES
The Moral Argument for the Existence of God
- If evil exists, then an objective, obligatory standard of being exists
- A1: analytic truth
- If it is obligatory, it was designed by an intelligent agent
- A1: we are not obliged to standards from non-persons
- A2: the concept of being wrong assumes the standard was an intentional creation
- If it is obligatory and designed by an intelligent agent, that intelligent agent was a creator that endued the obligation
- A1: avoids the externalist-only regress (and the internalist-only lack of motivation)
- So, if evil exists, an intelligent creator exists
- Evil exists
- A1: claimed in the Problem of Evil
- O1: give up the claim from the Problem of Evil
- R1: special pleading
- O2: "If God existed, then this would have been evil."
- R1: impossible counterfactual
- O1: give up the claim from the Problem of Evil
- A1: claimed in the Problem of Evil
- So, an intelligent creator (God) exists
- O1: entails that atheists can't be moral or that atheists can't have an ethical system
- R1: this is an argument about what makes the moral system true, not what needs to be believed to be moral or have an ethical system
Further Reading
My version of this argument is similar to that found in Robert Adams, Finite and Infinite Goods, though I think an amalgam of DCT and Aristotelian natures is the most convincing grounding of morality.
Probabilistic Problem of Evil
The classical Problem of Evil attempts to show God's existence is impossible, but things might be easier if we set our sights a little lower. The Probabilistic Problem of Evil attempts to show that the existence of God is improbable. In this video, I will look at a particular strategy for establishing this, which borrows the predictive methodology used in natural science.
NOTES
- Probabilistic Problem of Evil (Pre-Skeptical Theism)
- Hypothesis I predicts state of affairs E
- Hypothesis I (Hypothesis of Indifference): the universe is the result of indifferent forces
- State of Affairs E: evil exists
- Hypothesis T predicts state of affairs ~E
- Hypothesis T (Hypothesis of Theism): God created the universe
- I and T have equal prior probability
- If E obtains, then I is more probable than T
- If ~E obtains, then T is more probably than I
- E obtains
- So, I is more probable than T
- Hypothesis I predicts state of affairs E
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- O1: Skeptical Theism wouldn't predict ~E
- Probabilistic Problem of Evil (Post-Skeptical Theism)
- Hypothesis I predicts state of affairs E
- Hypothesis S abstains from predicting E or ~E
- Hypothesis S: Skeptical Theism
- I and S have equal prior probability
- If E obtains, then I is more probable than it was before
- If ~E obtains, then I is less probable than it was before
- If either E or ~E obtains, then the probability of S remains unaffected
- E obtains
- So, I is more probable than S
- Probabilistic Problem of Order
- Hypothesis I predicts state of affairs ~O
- State of Affairs O: the universe displays an intelligible order
- Hypothesis S predicts state of affairs O
- I and S have equal prior probability
- If ~O obtains, then I is more probable than S
- If O obtains, then S is more probable than I
- O obtains
- So, S is more probable than I
- Hypothesis I predicts state of affairs ~O
Further Reading
C. S. Lewis "The Problem of Pain"
The Megaphone Response to the Logical Problem of Evil
Assume for the sake of argument that God allows evil for our own good: what if we don't want that? The Megaphone Response holds that the only thing that is truly desirable for us requires us to experience evil, so it's not the case that we don't want God to allow it.
NOTES
Megaphone Response
- The things of this world can at best provide temporary, limited happiness
- We most deeply desire inexhaustible happiness
- So, the things of this world cannot provide what we most deeply desire
- Only an eternal, infinitely good, immortal-making being could provide inexhaustible happiness
- Only God is an eternal, infinitely good, immortal-making being
- So, only God can provide what we most deeply desire
- We are easily deceived into futilely pursuing happiness through the things of this world
- Evil shocks into disillusionment with the good things in this world and forces us to pursue something different
- So, possibly one reason God allows evil is that we need it to refocus on what will truly satisfy our desire for happiness
- O1: I don't want this disillusionment
- R1: it's important enough to give anyway
Further Reading
C. S. Lewis "The Problem of Pain"
Does God allow suffering for the sake of love?
Love is probably the most important things to humans apart from what we need to survive and for safety. In this video, I explore the possibility that love requires suffering, and then I relate this idea to the Problem of Evil.
NOTES
- Types of love
- Self-interested loves (Aristotle)
- 1. Friendship of Utility
- 2. Friendship of Pleasure
- 3. Friendship of Virtue
- True love (Aquinas)
- Desire for the good of the beloved
- Self-interested loves (Aristotle)
- Love defense
- 1. True love requires serving the beloved
- 2. Serving presupposes a lack of some good needed
- 3. The lack of a needed good is an evil
- 4. So, true love requires evil exist
- 5. True love is a great good
- 6. So, possibly God allows evil for the sake of true love
- I think this argument could be improved by changing (1) to say that true love is greatly benefited by serving the beloved. This would change (4) to say that true love is greatly benefited by the existence of evil. The overall point wouldn’t change because God would still be allowing evil for the sake of true love.
The Manichaean Defense
Why does God allow evil to exist? Possibly evil is necessarily connected to goodness. Maybe in order for us to have goodness, we must have evil as well. Or, maybe we need to have evil in order to understand what good is and to appreciate it.
NOTES
The Problem of Evil
- 1. If God exists, He could prevent evil
- S1: all-powerful & all-knowing
- 2. If God exists, He would prevent evil
- S1: all-good
- So, 3. If God exists, evil doesn’t exist
- 4. Evil exists
- So, 5. God doesn’t exist
The Manichaean Defense
- 1. Evil is necessarily tied to goodness such that, in order for good to exist, evil must exist
- 2. It is good for there to be goodness
- So, 3. Possibly, God allows evil for there to be goodness
- O1: false ex hypothesi
- God is all good and exists before anything else, so good is possible without evil
- O2: counterexample
- A world with one good thing and nothing else
- O3: ontological link is questionable
- 1. Manichaean View posits a necessary connection between the existence of good and the existence of evil
- 2. There is no good reason to think such a link exists
The Epistemological Manichaean Defense
- 1. Propositional knowledge can at best yield theoretic understanding of the good
- 2. Experiential knowledge yields appreciation and enjoyment of the good
- So, 3. Experiential knowledge is ceteris paribus better than propositional knowledge
- So, 4. Possibly, God allows evil so we can appreciate and truly enjoy the good, whereas without it we wouldn’t be able to
- O1: entails that sin is good
- R1: we can experience evil w/o committing evil
- Though it would still be the case that your experiential knowledge is good, the deed would still be bad overall
- R1: we can experience evil w/o committing evil
- O2: I would rather just trust God about goodness rather than get experiential knowledge of evil
- R1: even if it’s not what you prefer, it could still be good and therefore something God would allow
The Character Building Response
Why does God allow evil? The Character Building Defense argues that it is because we become better people for it. Is it worth the suffering to build character?
NOTES
The Problem of Evil
- 1. If God exists, He could prevent evil
- S1: all-powerful & all-knowing
- 2. If God exists, He would prevent evil
- S1: all-good
- So, 3. If God exists, evil doesn’t exist
- 4. Evil exists
- So, 5. God doesn’t exist
The Character Building Defense
- God allows suffering because it makes us better people
- O1: the character isn’t worth the suffering
- R1: God allows little evils b/c it preps us for big evils
- O1: why allow any evil?
- R2: Possibly we can’t be happy w/o high character
- P1: there is a necessary connection between character and happiness
- E.g., cowardice lends itself to the suffering of fear
- P2: it’s just the way we should be
- P1: there is a necessary connection between character and happiness
- R3: possibly it’s just a good thing to have strong character
- S1: stories we read don’t feature someone who’s never had any evil happen and are cowards
- O1: this is just comfort to get us through our current suffering
- R1: we’re still looking forward to that thing we think will be worth it
- O1: this is just comfort to get us through our current suffering
- S2: people who have the character built up wouldn’t give it up to avoid the evil
- S1: stories we read don’t feature someone who’s never had any evil happen and are cowards
- R1: God allows little evils b/c it preps us for big evils
- O2: God could have made us with high character already built in
- R1: it’s good that we have something to do with our own character building
- O3: not all evil is character building
- S1: when someone dies
- S2: when someone doesn’t react in a way that builds character
- S3: animal suffering?
- R1: partial response succeeds
Interviewed by Chester Delagneau
I was interviewed by theologian Chester Delagneau on the Problem of Evil. Chester is the author of Biblical Ethics: An Exegetical Approach to a Morality of Happiness and has a blog on human flourishing.
The Free Will Defense
Why does God allow evil? The Free Will Defense argues that it is a necessary consequence of free will, and that free will is worth the evil we suffer. Is this a sufficient reason? And is it possible to have free will without evil?
NOTES
The Problem of Evil
- 1. If God exists, He could prevent evil
- S1: all-powerful & all-knowing
- 2. If God exists, He would prevent evil
- S1: all-good
- So, 3. If God exists, evil doesn’t exist
- 4. Evil exists
- So, 5. God doesn’t exist
The Free Will Defense
- 1. We have free will
- 2. Evil is a necessary consequence of free will
- O1: free will without consequences
- S1: God could have made our brains such that we can make free will decisions to do the right thing, but every time we choose to do the wrong thing our brains stop us
- R1: no consequences = no personal growth
- R2: free will violation
- O2: free will agents who don’t sin
- 1. It is possible that no free will agent does evil
- S1: we are only morally responsible for things that are possible for us, so anytime it is impossible for us not to make a choice, it can’t be a moral choice, and therefore it can’t be an evil choice
- 2. God can create anything that is possible
- S1: all-knowing and all-powerful
- 3. Therefore, God could have made a world in which no free will agent does evil
- R1 (Open Theism): free will decisions known ahead of time are determined, and therefore not free will
- O1: they are determined by the agent, which is exactly free will
- R2 (Molinism): there isn’t a possible world where no agents sin
- O1: special pleading
- N1: the limits of this objection
- This doesn’t show God doesn’t allow some evil for the sake of our free will
- It only shows God didn’t need to use evil as a means to an end: the good end of free will
- Imagine I make the evil choice to steal a cupcake
- God might have allowed the evil because it is good that I have free will even if it is bad that I steal
- But, God also could have actualized the possible world in which I don’t steal the cupcake
- So, there is a further question as to why God would actualize the cupcake-stealing world vs. the non-cupcake-stealing world
- But, in the cupcake-stealing world, it’s still true that it was good for me to have free will even though I used it for villainy
- 1. It is possible that no free will agent does evil
- O3: evils that can’t be explained by free will
- S1: natural evils involve no free will choices (e.g., earthquakes, cancer)
- Sometimes natural evils and free will evils are intertwined, like when companies push smoking on kids (free will evil) knowing that it causes cancer (natural evil)
- But, there are also natural evils that have nothing to do with free will evils, like natural disasters that aren’t the result of climate change or anything like that
- S2: evils suffered by people other than the free will agent
- 1. The good of having free will is enjoyed by the free will agent
- 2. But, the evil suffered is often suffered by someone other than the free will agent
- 3. So, the good of one person is at the expense of another, which seems unfair
- R1: Fallen World Theory
- 1. The world began without any natural evils or evils suffered by people other than the free will agent
- 2. Someone used their free will choice to do something evil: the Original Sin
- 3. This Original Sin corrupted the world so that natural evils and evils suffered by people other than the free will agent would occur
- 4. So, all of these evils are consequences of an original free will evil, the Original Sin
- 5. The potential for the evil of the Original Sin was a necessary consequence of free will
- 6. So, all evil, including natural evils and those suffered by people other than the free will agent, are the necessary consequence of free will
- O1: the corruptibility of the world may have been a consequence of the Original Sin, but it wasn’t a necessary consequence, so these aren’t necessary consequences of Original Sin
- S1: God could have made a world that doesn’t get corrupted into having natural evils when an original sin happens
- S2: God could have put us in an isolated world with things that perfectly resemble people (e.g., a computer simulation or robots that are indistinguishable from humans) so that our free will choices don’t affect anyone else
- S1: natural evils involve no free will choices (e.g., earthquakes, cancer)
- 3. Free will is worth the evil
- A1: most people wouldn’t give up their free will to avoid evil
- A2: many things we value that require free will seem worth the evil
- S1: heroism
- O1: free will without consequences
Important notes
- If the Free Will Defense fails, that doesn’t mean the Problem of Evil succeeds
- S1: premise (2) remains unmotivated because God isn’t a moral agent like ourselves so that we can predict everything He would do
- S2: there are possible other reasons for God to allow evil
- If the Free Will Defense fails, free will might still explain why God allows some evils, just not all evils