If you’re looking for a formal proof, look elsewhere. This forum is not a place of academic rigor to me, but a place where I enjoy discussing interesting questions.
You p(name removed by moderator)oint your objection, which is useful. What is the logical contradiction between free will and a world without suffering? My provisional answer is contained in the definition of the world “free”, and I imagine it is precisely this which we are fundamentally debating.
A “free” act by agent A is an act that all other entities (including God) either a) cannot interfere with, or b) choose not to interfere with. If A has a choice between a red and a green apple, in other words, God does not tamper *in any way *with that choice, because He has chosen not to interfere with it.
Alright, so we have a template for a free act. Now, consider the Lord before the creation of man. In one possible universe, universe X, agent A exists, and in another, agent A does not exist. In His omniscience, the Lord knows that agent A – if he existed – would choose to kill agent B. At this point, of course, the Lord may choose to create universe Y instead, thereby averting the existence of A and the death of B.
You’re asking me to prove that, in all possible universes with free will, there will always be evil chosen – in essence, that every possible universe contains agent A or his proxy. There, I think I’ve set out the situation quite clearly.
I think that the position that all possible universes with free will would contain wrongdoing is more intuitive – but, of course, this is no proof. As I said, I haven’t time for a proof. But here’s a sketch of possibility of a blueprint of one:
It relates to the concept of a limit. If there were only one decision in a universe (to kill B or not to kill B), then there would be a 1 in 2 chance of creating a painless universe. If there were two decisions, there would be a 1 in 4 chance. But in a single person’s life, say, there are X decisions – and please realize that X here represents a number in excess of 100 billion, at least. And there are (+or-)Y alternatives in each decision. (You could choose to each Mini Wheats, Cheerios, Chex, etc.). Not all of these are moral decisions, but a good many are.
So, in a one-person universe, the chance of creating a painless universe is one in two to the XY power – and the XY power is an awfully high number. Now add 10 people. Already, the number has become (in essence) infinitely higher. As the number of people (and therefore the potential for
goodness) increases, the possibility of making the universe painless becomes infinitely small. Unless I am mistaken, mathematicians have found there to be essentially no difference between the number limit-1 (.99999999999etc) and the number 1. Thus, it seems infinitely improbable that even God could find a universe of any substantial goodness that did not also include evil.
Yes, Spock, I realize that this looks somewhat like the solution you criticized. But a one-person universe has little or no potential for goodness – this is the key distinction I want to make.
That’s my best shot.