M
MindOverMatter2
Guest
Those who claim that evil is contradictory to existence of a good God tend to assume that they have a deductive argument. I.e, evil exist, therefore a good God doesn’t exist, since a good God would never create beings knowing the evil that would occur.
But what a lot of anti-theists fail to realize is the fact that one only has a valid deductive argument if they have all the relevant knowledge upon which they can make a necessary inference. Things evidently can look drastically different when viewing something from a different point of view, especially a divine point of view and we therefore shouldn’t be surprised if we find things to be true that we once thought were false. The point i am trying to make here is, those who argue that they have a deductive argument are finite in knowledge, and thus cannot possibly know what it means when an infinite moral being with infinite knowledge creates a world with free beings; since we are perceiving the world from a finite perspective. God might have a good reason to permit evil that we do not yet know about. Thus with out perfect relevant knowledge, there is no basis upon which to say honestly that this world is not “God Compatible.”
Without perfect knowledge, negative speculation that tries to imply that a good God would not create a world such as this amounts to nothing more than unsupportable conspiracy, because we don’t know what a morally sufficient world would look like. It may very well be a world like this in which we must love perfectly in order to have heaven; which is what revelation, especially the new testament, reveals to us.
From this i conclude that the logical argument from evil is epistemological weak and is therefore invalid.
But what a lot of anti-theists fail to realize is the fact that one only has a valid deductive argument if they have all the relevant knowledge upon which they can make a necessary inference. Things evidently can look drastically different when viewing something from a different point of view, especially a divine point of view and we therefore shouldn’t be surprised if we find things to be true that we once thought were false. The point i am trying to make here is, those who argue that they have a deductive argument are finite in knowledge, and thus cannot possibly know what it means when an infinite moral being with infinite knowledge creates a world with free beings; since we are perceiving the world from a finite perspective. God might have a good reason to permit evil that we do not yet know about. Thus with out perfect relevant knowledge, there is no basis upon which to say honestly that this world is not “God Compatible.”
Without perfect knowledge, negative speculation that tries to imply that a good God would not create a world such as this amounts to nothing more than unsupportable conspiracy, because we don’t know what a morally sufficient world would look like. It may very well be a world like this in which we must love perfectly in order to have heaven; which is what revelation, especially the new testament, reveals to us.
From this i conclude that the logical argument from evil is epistemological weak and is therefore invalid.