A while back, in the thread Is Google's LaMDA AI sentient? There seems to be strong evidence to that effect, I made a comment with reference to the problem of evil, to which @nbtruthman responded thoughtfully, offering a theodicy based on an article to which he linked.
Given the thoughtfulness of the theodicy, a thoughtful response seemed warranted, and I'd long ago foreshadowed one, a foreshadowing which I now realise. Because I don't want to divert that thread, I am starting a new one to discuss theodicies - this one in particular, any others that anyone might want to raise, and the notion of theodicy in general.
Here's nbtruthman's theodicy, below which I share my response:
Here's my response:
There's a strong scent of plausibility in the general idea behind this theodicy, an idea which nbtruthman summarises as that of (necessary) trade-offs. It has a hard ring of realism about it. I want to examine it from a more idealistic perspective though, because I don't think that, despite its thoughtful premise, it ultimately succeeds.
To begin with, here are the divine qualities which I understand a theodicy, including this one, to assume of the God it attempts to defend (I refer to a God with the first three qualities as a "tri-omni" God):
As nbtruthman acknowledges towards the end of his explication of his theodicy, various individuals have over the years claimed more or less plausibly to have visited, channelled accounts of, or simply conceived of via a religious paradigm various realms which do not seem to be nearly as full of suffering as that of this planet, and are no worse off for that. For example, there is on the extreme end of perfection the Christian heaven, and, more along the lines of nbtruthman's acknowledgement, the realm in which the spirit Seth claims in the channelled book Seth Speaks to abide (I have read only a small part of this book - enough though to get a sense of this purported realm).
At the very least, these realms are conceivable without contradiction. To an omnipotent God, such conceivability is realisability. Thus, we are left with the question: why create this realm which involves so much suffering when other realms of less suffering are possible with no apparent corresponding disadvantage? One answer typically suggested, and which nbtruthman's theodicy seems to give consideration to, is: because it offers a faster path to spiritual growth than do those "happier" realms, and some of us freely choose with informed consent to take that path and incarnate here to speed up our growth.
The main problem I see with this answer is that presumably that in which spiritual growth consists is movement towards the ultimate state in which one is a purely good being of perfectly good intent, and positive, expansive creative expression - a state in which one would not even want to choose evil, let alone actually do so, which nullifies the idea that free will necessarily entails the possibility of choosing evil in anything other than the most hypothetical of senses, and thus the "need" for a realm such as ours in which its residents are capable of such a choice, and make it so regularly.
Another problem I see is that many citizens of this planet strongly believe that they did not consent to incarnate here, and were either forced into it or simply ended up here inexplicably.
I think it's very worth noting, too, before analysing the specifics of this theodicy, that it has nothing to say of metaphysical/spiritual evil. My experience, which matches that of others, is that wicked, malicious, and evil spiritual entities exist and exercise influence in our world. This theodicy is silent on these entities, and on why a tri-omni God would allow them to exist or at least to have influence in this world.
One final point that I think is worth making before getting to specifics: the required strength of a theodicy depends on the nature it conceives God to have. Our expectations of a reality free of evil and suffering are much higher given a tri-omni God than given a God who lacks one or more of that triad of properties.
Turning to this theodicy itself (with reference to both the original article by Granville Sewell, as well as nbtruthman's summary of it and his own thoughts): the gist of it is that the suffering and natural evil on this planet might be justified in that the same features of the world and the sentient beings incarnated in it that facilitate that suffering and natural evil also facilitate goodness. Those features are the regularity of nature and free will.
It first points out that the regularity of nature provides both good (e.g., gravity keeping us from floating off into space) and bad (e.g., planes sometimes crashing because of gravity), and then attempts to answer a critical question: why does God not intervene to prevent the bad outcomes of these regularities? It offers three answers:
The second answer fairly implies that an individual accepts with informed consent the risks and dangers in climbing a mountain, but there are many natural risks and dangers in this reality that we don't appear[1] to have accepted with informed consent, but to which we are subject anyway. It is easily possible to imagine a reality in which God intervenes (potentially silently) to at least prevent major natural disasters such as earthquakes and tsunamis from occurring. Again, I am not convinced, then, that this theodicy meets the first criterion I stipulated above.
[1] But is this appearance an illusion, and did we all enter this reality by an informed choice which is now veiled from us? It seems unlikely, but I can't rule it out.
The third answer seems to assume that God would intervene inconsistently, but it is also possible that God could intervene in a consistent manner, such that it could be predicted, and thus amenable to science. Nbtruthman, you already allow for the possibility of some degree of divine intervention inasmuch as you are an advocate of the intelligent design of life. Intelligent design (as an intervention into reality) has not so much stifled science as opened up a new area of science: inference to the existence of the Divine or at least of intelligent higher powers.
Next, this theodicy claims with respect to free will that the more of it we have, the better, but also the worse, we can be. The idea seems to be that free will isn't free unless it permits evil choices to the same extent as good ones. I don't believe though that we should accept this claim, for two reasons:
The final claim of this theodicy is that there is value in suffering, up to "a certain point": suffering provides opportunities for heroism, inspires creative expression, and leads to a fuller life. There seems to be some validity to this claim, however, two rejoinders offer pause for thought:
Finally: thanks to nbtruthman for sharing his thoughts and the article which inspired them. I hope that this response is of at least some value.
Given the thoughtfulness of the theodicy, a thoughtful response seemed warranted, and I'd long ago foreshadowed one, a foreshadowing which I now realise. Because I don't want to divert that thread, I am starting a new one to discuss theodicies - this one in particular, any others that anyone might want to raise, and the notion of theodicy in general.
Here's nbtruthman's theodicy, below which I share my response:
(2022-06-21, 04:07 PM)nbtruthman Wrote: My point of view on the matter of the ontological nature of human existence and suffering poses the stance that there are true victims - they are the human selves of immortal souls, but all suffering is temporary and the highest plan is wise even if very hard for humans to accept. For me, the problem of evil and suffering has to be taken very seriously and requires determined analysis and development of arguments, the action of the reasoning faculty. I can’t either dismiss it from sort of higher perspective of consciousness, or entirely depend on faith.
I cite the following paraphrasing of the short essay by Granville Sewell (https://evolutionnews.org/2017/07/the-bi...to-design/). I think it is one of the best deistic rationalizations of the reality of evil I have encountered. Of course there are other rationalizations, and of course the materialist view that no valid rationalization is possible, so “suck it up”.
A vast amount of suffering is caused by evil actions of human beings. Second, there is a vast amount of “natural evil” caused by the natural world by things like disease, floods and earthquakes. Any proposed deistic or other solution to the ancient theological problem of suffering has to explain both categories.
The basic approach in this essay was to combine various arguments that mankind’s suffering is an inevitable accompaniment of our greatest blessings and benefits, the result of a vast number of intricate tradeoffs.
Why pain, suffering and evil? Main points that are made:
(1) There is the observed regularity of natural law. The basic laws of physics appear to be cleverly designed to create conditions suitable for human life and development. It can be surmised that this intricate fine-tuned design is inherently a series of tradeoffs and balances, allowing and fostering human existence but also inevitably allowing “natural evil” to regularly occur. In other words, the best solution to the overall “system requirements” (which include furnishing manifold opportunities for humans to experience and achieve) inherently includes natural effects that cause suffering to human beings.
This points out that there may be logical and fundamental limitations to God’s creativity. Maybe even He can’t 100% satisfy all the requirements simultaneously. Maybe He doesn’t have complete control over nature, because that would interfere with the essential requirements for creative and fulfilling human life. After all, human achievement requires imperfection and adverse conditions to exist as a natural part of human life.
(2) There is the apparent need for human free will as one of the most important “design requirements”. This inevitably leads to vast amounts of suffering caused by evil acts of humans to each other. Unfortunately, there is no way to get around that one, except to make humans “zombies” or robots, which would defeat the whole purpose of human existence.
(3) Some suffering is necessary to enable us to experience life in its fullest and to achieve the most. Often it is through suffering that we experience the deepest love of family and friends. “The man who has never experienced any setbacks or disappointments invariably is a shallow person, while one who has suffered is usually better able to empathize with others. Some of the closest and most beautiful relationships occur between people who have suffered similar sorrows.”
Some of the great works of literature, art and music were the products of suffering. “One whose life has led him to expect continued comfort and ease is not likely to make the sacrifices necessary to produce anything of great and lasting value.”
It should be noted that the casual claim that all an omnipotent God needs to do is step in whenever accident, disease or evil doings ensue, and cancel out, prevent these happenings. Thus no innocent suffering. One of the most basic problems with this is that it would make the world and its underlying laws of operation purely happenstance and the result of a perhaps capricious God. There would be no regularity of natural law, and therefore there could be no mastery of the physical world by mankind through science. In fact there could be no science and the scientific method as we know them. And of course, there would be little learning from adversity and difficulty, and therefore little depth of character.
Sewell concludes:
“Why does God remain backstage, hidden from view, working behind the scenes while we act out our parts in the human drama? ….now perhaps we finally have an answer. If he were to walk out onto the stage, and take on a more direct and visible role, I suppose he could clean up our act, and rid the world of pain and evil — and doubt. But our human drama would be turned into a divine puppet show, and it would cost us some of our greatest blessings: the regularity of natural law which makes our achievements meaningful; the free will which makes us more interesting than robots; the love which we can receive from and give to others; and even the opportunity to grow and develop through suffering. I must confess that I still often wonder if the blessings are worth the terrible price, but God has chosen to create a world where both good and evil can flourish, rather than one where neither can exist. He has chosen to create a world of greatness and infamy, of love and hatred, and of joy and pain, rather than one of mindless robots or unfeeling puppets.”
Of course, the brute fact is that the bottom line is there is a huge, egregious amount of truly innocent and apparently meaningless suffering, that our instinct tells us is wrong. Is it all worth it? Yes, there appears to be a plausible rationalization; overall it all may be a vast tradeoff, but admittedly some people might conclude it isn’t a good one from the strictly human perspective. The cost of all this is a terrible thing.
I reject the strict Christian perspective centered on Jesus’s sacrifice. In particular the belief that all humans that do not accept Jesus Christ as their personal savior are condemned to eternal agony in Hell. Regardless of whether they have loved God all their lives, or that they simply have not been exposed to Christian teachings. Surely an immeasureably unjust system.
But there is another additional spiritual but non-Christian rationalization of the existence of vast amounts of pain, suffering and evil in the world, that would supplement Granville Sewell’s. Reality is exceedingly complicated, and it is reasonable that there would be multiple harmonizing perspectives rationalizing the seemingly irreconcilable. This is the perspective of the spiritualist, much of the New Age movement, and the so-called Perennial Wisdom. Perhaps full acceptance does finally require faith. But this is a faith that it all is really justifiable from the perspective of the soul, and that we are in some incomprehensible way literally our soul. This is the acceptance of the Eastern conception of reincarnation and that Earth life is some sort of “school” in which souls accomplish the learning that can only be accomplished through suffering. Of course, that is not the only purpose of life on Earth, but it is the primary one. There is also the experience of various forms of deep joy that can only take place in a place of physical limitations, great physical beauty, and opportunity for great creativity. Unlike the afterlife existence essentially in which “thoughts are things”, and the Light of God is always available.
This rationalization has the advantage of having a large body of empirical evidence to partially back it up. This would primarily be the very many veridical independently verified NDE experiences, and also the similarly investigated and verified reincarnation memories of small children. Also to be considered excellent empirical evidence is the large body of verified mediumistic communications. This area supplements the trade-off insights constituted by the large body of scientific knowledge of the world and living beings that has been built up through the scientific method.
Here's my response:
There's a strong scent of plausibility in the general idea behind this theodicy, an idea which nbtruthman summarises as that of (necessary) trade-offs. It has a hard ring of realism about it. I want to examine it from a more idealistic perspective though, because I don't think that, despite its thoughtful premise, it ultimately succeeds.
To begin with, here are the divine qualities which I understand a theodicy, including this one, to assume of the God it attempts to defend (I refer to a God with the first three qualities as a "tri-omni" God):
- Omnipotence.
- Omniscience.
- Omnibenevolence (perfect goodness and lovingness).
- Authorship (being the Creator of everything that exists other than Himself/Herself/Itself).
- A reality with a meaningfully better balance between good and evil, and without sacrificing anything crucial, cannot be coherently conceived, at least not without our actual reality also existing (in parallel or as a lower plane, or "school", or "boot camp", or what-have-you), and,
- The absolute balance between good and evil in this reality in any case justifies its creation versus the alternative of it not having been created at all.
As nbtruthman acknowledges towards the end of his explication of his theodicy, various individuals have over the years claimed more or less plausibly to have visited, channelled accounts of, or simply conceived of via a religious paradigm various realms which do not seem to be nearly as full of suffering as that of this planet, and are no worse off for that. For example, there is on the extreme end of perfection the Christian heaven, and, more along the lines of nbtruthman's acknowledgement, the realm in which the spirit Seth claims in the channelled book Seth Speaks to abide (I have read only a small part of this book - enough though to get a sense of this purported realm).
At the very least, these realms are conceivable without contradiction. To an omnipotent God, such conceivability is realisability. Thus, we are left with the question: why create this realm which involves so much suffering when other realms of less suffering are possible with no apparent corresponding disadvantage? One answer typically suggested, and which nbtruthman's theodicy seems to give consideration to, is: because it offers a faster path to spiritual growth than do those "happier" realms, and some of us freely choose with informed consent to take that path and incarnate here to speed up our growth.
The main problem I see with this answer is that presumably that in which spiritual growth consists is movement towards the ultimate state in which one is a purely good being of perfectly good intent, and positive, expansive creative expression - a state in which one would not even want to choose evil, let alone actually do so, which nullifies the idea that free will necessarily entails the possibility of choosing evil in anything other than the most hypothetical of senses, and thus the "need" for a realm such as ours in which its residents are capable of such a choice, and make it so regularly.
Another problem I see is that many citizens of this planet strongly believe that they did not consent to incarnate here, and were either forced into it or simply ended up here inexplicably.
I think it's very worth noting, too, before analysing the specifics of this theodicy, that it has nothing to say of metaphysical/spiritual evil. My experience, which matches that of others, is that wicked, malicious, and evil spiritual entities exist and exercise influence in our world. This theodicy is silent on these entities, and on why a tri-omni God would allow them to exist or at least to have influence in this world.
One final point that I think is worth making before getting to specifics: the required strength of a theodicy depends on the nature it conceives God to have. Our expectations of a reality free of evil and suffering are much higher given a tri-omni God than given a God who lacks one or more of that triad of properties.
Turning to this theodicy itself (with reference to both the original article by Granville Sewell, as well as nbtruthman's summary of it and his own thoughts): the gist of it is that the suffering and natural evil on this planet might be justified in that the same features of the world and the sentient beings incarnated in it that facilitate that suffering and natural evil also facilitate goodness. Those features are the regularity of nature and free will.
It first points out that the regularity of nature provides both good (e.g., gravity keeping us from floating off into space) and bad (e.g., planes sometimes crashing because of gravity), and then attempts to answer a critical question: why does God not intervene to prevent the bad outcomes of these regularities? It offers three answers:
- We can't assume that God has complete control over Nature.
- Eliminating the possibility of failure - and danger - cheapens our accomplishments (e.g., climbing a mountain versus getting to the summit by cable car).
- Frequent intervention by God would make science impossible.
The second answer fairly implies that an individual accepts with informed consent the risks and dangers in climbing a mountain, but there are many natural risks and dangers in this reality that we don't appear[1] to have accepted with informed consent, but to which we are subject anyway. It is easily possible to imagine a reality in which God intervenes (potentially silently) to at least prevent major natural disasters such as earthquakes and tsunamis from occurring. Again, I am not convinced, then, that this theodicy meets the first criterion I stipulated above.
[1] But is this appearance an illusion, and did we all enter this reality by an informed choice which is now veiled from us? It seems unlikely, but I can't rule it out.
The third answer seems to assume that God would intervene inconsistently, but it is also possible that God could intervene in a consistent manner, such that it could be predicted, and thus amenable to science. Nbtruthman, you already allow for the possibility of some degree of divine intervention inasmuch as you are an advocate of the intelligent design of life. Intelligent design (as an intervention into reality) has not so much stifled science as opened up a new area of science: inference to the existence of the Divine or at least of intelligent higher powers.
Next, this theodicy claims with respect to free will that the more of it we have, the better, but also the worse, we can be. The idea seems to be that free will isn't free unless it permits evil choices to the same extent as good ones. I don't believe though that we should accept this claim, for two reasons:
- Surely, the ultimate Divine objective is a reality of perfect goodness, in which case, there doesn't seem to be a good reason for a tri-omni God to even include the potential for evil in human beings at the start. Such a God could at least use counterfactual omniscience to discern which potential beings would make (particularly) evil choices and simply arrange for them never to be brought into existence.
- Free will includes the possibility of freely choosing (preferring) to be free from harm - which the vast majority of us do choose (prefer). Permitting evil choices violates this free choice (preference) on the part of the victims of those evil choices. Looked at in this way - and I recognise that it is a particular framing to which some might not be amenable - the will cannot truly be unconditionally free unless evil choices (perpetrated against others) are not permitted/possible.
The final claim of this theodicy is that there is value in suffering, up to "a certain point": suffering provides opportunities for heroism, inspires creative expression, and leads to a fuller life. There seems to be some validity to this claim, however, two rejoinders offer pause for thought:
- The crucial element lies in its qualification: up to "a certain point". Much of the suffering in this world seems to go beyond that point.
- There are skilled adherents of Eastern religions such as Buddhism who, through contemplative practices, claim to have transcended suffering - in part evidenced by monks who calmly burn themselves to death publicly as a form of political protest - and they nevertheless value life. Thus, there does not seem to be a need for suffering in order for life to be valuable or valued.
Finally: thanks to nbtruthman for sharing his thoughts and the article which inspired them. I hope that this response is of at least some value.