Q
Qoeleth
Guest
It is often said that the world is “intelligible”. It is in the sense that same physical laws are consistently maintained, that there is a continuity and predictability of matter, time, etc. In other words, it can be described by rational science…
But there also seem to be many elements of non-intelligibility. For example, why bad things happen to good people, etc.
I wonder if it would be fair to say that the world is “physically intelligible”, but “morally unintelligible” (maybe “morally” is not the right word here). But it seems wrong to describe the world as entirely intelligible, when things happen which cannot be explained in rational terms, and which seem to lack moral justification, or ‘justice’.
But there also seem to be many elements of non-intelligibility. For example, why bad things happen to good people, etc.
I wonder if it would be fair to say that the world is “physically intelligible”, but “morally unintelligible” (maybe “morally” is not the right word here). But it seems wrong to describe the world as entirely intelligible, when things happen which cannot be explained in rational terms, and which seem to lack moral justification, or ‘justice’.