**tonyrey **writes:
Thanks for the clarification
Two questions:
- Do you believe that this is the best possible world?
- How do you define the best possible world?
Thanks again.
You continue:
Why do you make an exception with this world? Before this world was created (and, therefore, when it was a possible world), free will was “a part” of this world, was it not?
You go on:
So, according to your view, suffering is an essential part of any physical world? And, moreover, the non-existence of suffering in the world in as contradictory as the notion of a square circle?
Perhaps you are entertaining a different view of “inconsistency” than I, but I do not see how suffering is essential to the world. Mind you, friend, that there will not be a total absence of the physical in heaven. Will
suffering be essential there as well?
You conclude:
First of all, I do not see how my regarding the argument of Leibniz to be weak has any bearing upon my standing as a Christian or a Catholic.
Second, I have already stated my reasons for rejecting the aforesaid argument, namely, the very notion of a best possible world is–to use your language–“inconsistent.” That is to say, it is self-referentially incoherent. What, exactly, is the best possible world? All possible worlds are, by definition, finite, and therefore, all possible worlds, no matter how wonderful they are and no matter what their final outcome is, can always be made better (e.g., one more morally upstanding person, one less suffering child, one more day of sunshine, etc.).
In Christ,
FCCopleston