T
The_Exodus
Guest
Cruelty implies unjust or unwise punishment. On the Christian supposition, there is no punishment which is either unwise or unjust. You may claim the opposite is the case as loud as you want, but you would only be attacking a straw man, a caricature, and not the actual Christian theology. Thus, your accusation holds no parity.Sin is a religious concept. I am presenting a non-religious scenario. And so far you did not present any argument against the idea that revelation is cruel, because it makes the creatures aware that they are created, and they are at the mercy of creator, who can do whatever he wants with them - according to the creator’s whim.
All 4 of your options fail to understand and thus to articulate the Christian understanding of reality, so the 5th option proceeds from necessity, as it were.By the way, there is no “fifth” option.
Option 1 fails in that it limits the contructors knowledge, which breaks down when things become “too complex.” (If this is implied of a created being, it fails to show any parity also.)
Sed contra - the Christian view holds God to be omniscient.
Option 2 is actually the closest to the Christian understanding of providence, though you have failed to give an account of evil, and so it is incomplete.
Sed contra - the Christian view holds that evil exists and is permitted by God to occur
Option 3 is very close to option 2, except its conclusion seems to come from nowhere, without any logical connection to the body of the paragraph: “But this method would not yield desirable results in the short run. There would be fluctuations.” Is this what you think the Christian understanding is of God’s providence, or are you trying to offer an alternative? At any rate, I can make no sense - whether this be a caricature or an honest attempt - of the conclusion of option 3.
Sed contra - The Christian view holds that God is omnipotent, and thus he does not make a creation with “undesirable fluctuations.”
Option 4 fails in many respects, because a) it assumes his commands are “invisible”; and also b) it assumes that “corrective feedback” must be “visible” in terms which you have not yet specified. You haven’t shown that corrective feedback even needs to be part of the system (for the constructor could have made a “one and done” system in which, after the creature turns away from God, that’s it, there is no chance for feedback), nor have you shown under what mode such a system must be “visible” (I would contend that such a system IS visible, but not to those who are themselves continually sinning. Those with eyes can see, the blind cannot.)
Sed contra - The Christian view holds that commands are visible and understandable, else sin would never occur, since it is a knowing violating or depature from the Divine Rule. It also holds that the universe is a system which, in the end (or, from God’s point of view, from eternity), has the ultimate “feedback” system. It also holds that much of that feedback can be observed here on earth (though not all), in that the righteous are filled with peace, which is far from the wicked.