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Prodigal_Son
Guest
What makes you think that the modern idea of morality is significantly better than more ancient ideas? I’ll agree that we have our virtues (greater equality of opportunity, less formalized slavery), but we also have some characteristic vices (the dehumanization of commerce, laws against banning infanticide, the triumph of license over liberty). Are these really much worse than ritual sacrifice, or selling human beings as chattel?I think one sign of this goodness is the general direction of evolution (not only biological evolution, but also social evolution, including the development of morals). I think if you look at this on a graph, you would see a general upward progression of human morality (notwithstanding deep downward spikes along the way).
I can understand that your god couldn’t create the universe as it is now all in one fell swoop, but how could he a) create creatures that would gradually become moral, without b) being able to create creatures who never stopped being moral?God created a framework where the trajectory of evolution travels a certain way, a direction I think must be interpreted as good.
If I start creating a set of robots with a certain intention, I will be quite careful to make sure that they do not attack me. This does not mean, however, that my intentions are good. I agree that the creation often reflects the creator, but couldn’t an evil creator have some particular motive to create beings capable of good? You seem to be conflating intelligence and goodness, which are quite distinct.If we assume god is intelligent (and I think we must assume this, or describing our creator as a god wouldn’t make much sense) then it’s logical to assume he wouldn’t have created a world where there was a substantial risk of backfire (or where the result could substantially deviate from his desired result, or where there was a significant risk the world he created would turn against him). God would want a world that reflected him, at least as much as possible. Therefore, it makes sense to believe god is good.
I agree, somewhat, on your point about “absolute omnipotence” being potentially overstated. But I do not see, at all, how not healing amputees miraculously is discriminatory. There is certainly a distinction involved, but the distinction is equivalent to God allowing some people to play brilliant music and others not to have that talent. Your demand for equality of healing would, if taken to its logically extreme, do away with most expressions of individual worth.Better or worse isn’t the question, it would avoid logical contradiction and a discriminatory result if god created a world where limbs and other organs could regrow naturally. An assumption of absolute omnipotence must assume god could have created any world he wanted to; and it must also assume that god knew this problem would develop before the point change became impossible (and in fact an assumption that there could have been a point where change became impossible itself dilutes omnipotence).