How are we (and Thomas Aquinas) defining evil? What I mean is, does evil include the subjective suffering of those who are the recipients (from others’ actions, disease, mental anguish, war, poverty, natural catastrophes), or only the behavior of the actors who inflict pain on others? If evil includes both the actor’s behavior and the consequences felt by the recipient, how does this argument explain the recipient’s suffering?
Melterzerboy:
Good question.
In my opinion, ‘evil’ cannot be a
thing, in the ontological (if not
per se) sense of that word. It can only be one, or the accumulation of a multitude, of defect(s) inherent in matter. Illness is nothing more than the lack (absence) of health, though it may be caused by a pathogen. The pathogen has stripped out the exigencies that allow a creature to exhibit what is the norm, the normal. But, the ‘evil’ is the
lack (of good health), not the pathogen. The pathogen is simply a creature trying to stay alive: inextricably attached to its dynamic of life at all urgency. We have no idea
why the pathogen exists. We only know that it does.
That brings us to the question of “pain.” Thoughtfully, living things have been provided with mechanics that allow us to
feel when we are being attacked by such things as pathogens. Such sensory somatics are, in the main, very beneficial, i.e., not harmful. But, like anything that consists of matter, or matter’s requirements, such sensations can, on occasion, be exaggerated. So, to be correct, we would have to call those somatics both
good and
evil. But, those words are by their definitions (and our understanding)
exclusionary. That is,
evil is excluded by
good, and visa versa. Otherwise, we would have a square circle, or a pitch black bright light.
The argument as to why God made His creatures thus and so is logically explained: there can only be
one God. There can only be
one unconditioned reality. Why was matter en-souled? I suppose we’ll know soon enough. All things considered, were it not for the relative rarity of ‘pain and suffering’, the world not be growing 80,000,000 people a year. Reproduction, and its attentive pleasurable acts, are not the results of creatures experiencing pain and suffering; rather, they are the results of people experiencing relative happiness and the pain-free dynamic to carry the species forward.
God bless,
jd