Title: The Problem of Evil
1The Problem of Evil
2Our Question
- Our question is Does God Exist?
- Theism God exists.
- Atheism God does not exist.
- Agnosticism I dont know.
- Weak I happen not to know. Maybe someone else
does. - Strong No one knows (despite what they might
think). - Super-Strong It is impossible for anyone to know.
3We Need Ground Rules
- To clarify the question What sort of thing is
God supposed to be? - Another way of putting it
- What would the world have to be like in order to
contain God? - (Compare What would the world have to be like
in order to contain Pegasus?) - This is suppose to help lay ground rules for the
debate we should try to give an answer that
both atheists and theists can agree on.
4What Sort of Thing is God?
- God is supposed to be
- Powerful (Omnipotent, Almighty) God can do
anything that can be done - Knowledgeable (Omniscient) God can know
anything that can be known and - Good (Omnibenevolent) God loves and cares about
all his creatures. - Set aside Whether, additionally, if God exists,
he can do things that cannot be done or whether
God can know things that cannot be known. (Even
Theists break their heads on how God could be
this powerful or knowledgeable.) - So Theists only assert the existence of a being
able to do anything that can be done. (Similarly
for knowledge.)
5God is a Person
- Conclusion from our reflections If God exists,
he can do things, he knows things, and there are
things that he cares about. - We call individuals who are agents, knowers, and
carers persons. - So, both atheists and theists agree if God
exists, he is a person.
6Mere Monotheism
- Some other stuff commonly attributed to God the
creator of the world, the creator of humankind,
the inspiration and/or source for certain
religious texts, the source of the moral law, the
judge of human beings, etc. - Most of this other stuff is not shared commonly
among the monotheistic religions, so we will
ignore it. - We are asking about what you might call
- mere monotheism the existence of a person who
is almighty, all-knowing, and all-good. - This approach attempts to find a lowest common
denominator among different monotheistic
religious traditions. - Our approach neglects the very real differences
among different monotheistic religious
traditions. If you want to understand those, you
should take a course from someone who knows
something about them.
7Remarks on What Needs to be Shown
- This notion of God is not entirely bloodless.
- Not just anything will count as God theists
need to show that a certain kind of person
exists. - Trivially, perhaps, showing that there is a
paperweight will not suffice. - Less trivially, showing that there was a Big Bang
does not show that God exists the Big Bang is
not a person. (In particular, the Big Bang does
not know things or have concerns.) - Showing that a certain idea exists does not show
that God exists. An idea is not a person. (The
atheist knows very well that religious people
have an idea of God. What the atheist denies is
that corresponding to this idea is a perfect
person.)
8The Problem of Evil is an Atheistic Argument
- We are now going to look at one atheistic
argument an argument that God does not exist. - The argument is often called the problem of evil.
- The argument is that this is only a problem for
theism you can avoid the problem by becoming an
atheist.
9There is Evil in this world (or at least bad)
- The problem of evil revolves around the claim
that there is evil in this world. - This seems a truism there is cruelty, jealousy,
pain, depression, torture, injustice, disease,
natural calamity of all sorts, etc., etc., ad
nauseum. - Note many think that the word evil is endowed
with supernatural connotations. - For instance, some think that calling something
evil requires the existence of some malevolent
intelligence (i.e. the devil) whose purposes it
abets. - (Note you can believe that God exists without
believing that the devil exists.) - Even if you think this is true, and you deny the
existence of the devil, you can still get a
problem going for theism if you are willing to
allow that those things in the list above are
bad. - The problem of bad has its drawbacks as a label
for this unit, so Ill just keep using the old
terminology.
10Deep BackgroundTwo Kinds of Evil
- Some of the bad things in the world come about as
the result of human actions. - Some of the bad things in the world are the
result of natural forces. - dist
-
Natural Evil
Artificial Evil
What is it?
Evil not caused by human actions
Evil caused by human actions
- cutting in line (injustice)
- Making fun of your aunt for her weird dye-job
(cruelty) - stealing a nickel from your Mom for candy (theft)
- hurricanes
- epidemics
- tsunamis
- earthquakes
Examples
11Complicating the Distinction INatural Evil and
Human Action
- It is not obvious how bright a line can be drawn
between natural and artificial evil. - Note If there are no human beings (and perhaps
other animals) involved, then natural disasters
may not be evil at all. - Examples
- paleozoic volcanic eruptions
- that huge storm on Jupiter
12Complicating the Distinction INatural Evil and
Human Action (cont.)
- Apparent Lesson There is no natural evil that
doesnt result in some sort of suffering for
someone. - Homework Is this true? Come up with a case of
natural evil that involves no suffering for
anyone. - An upshot some natural evils are made worse by
human action. - Examples
- building a city below the level of an adjoining
lake - living at the base of a volcano
- raising chickens or other livestock in great
numbers - So there is often a component of human error,
wrong, willfulness, pride, etc., in natural
evils.
13Complicating the Distinction IIArtificial Evil
and Nature
- Artificial evil almost always requires the
cooperation of nature. - (Possible purely artificial evils include,
perhaps, murder in your heart morally bad
thoughts or feelings that do not get expressed in
bodily action. But ordinary, run-of-the-mill
artificial evil requires cooperation from
nature.) - Examples
- Hotel Rwanda
- the villains gun
- The effectiveness of ordinary human action
typically requires that the natural causal laws
operate in the right (or wrong!) way. - Bad actions are no different.
14Summary of the complications
- Some natural evils are bad (or made worse)
because of human action. - Almost any artificial evil is bad because of the
operation of natural laws. - Some cases are hard to classify. Examples
- global warming
- the Dust Bowl
- using bioweapons
15Existence of God, Existence of Evil
- Many have held that the existence of evil poses a
problem for theism. - Incompatibilism If God exists, then bad things
do not happen. - Now, there are two questions on the table
- Is there evil? and
- Does God exist?
- This gives us (technically) four positions
Do bad things happen?
Does God exist?
Compatibilist Theism
Yes
Yes
X
Implausible!
Yes
No
These are the only positions we will be
considering
Polyanna Theism
Incompatibilist Atheism
X
Yes
No
Implausible!
Polyanna Atheism
X
X
No
No
16The Significance of Incompatibilism
- Heres something that it is very implausible to
deny bad things happen. - (Just because it is implausible to deny this,
doesnt mean that no one ever has. Some
philosophers (plausibly, Augustine) have claimed
that evil is not fully real.) - For the purposes of this discussion, I am just
going to take for granted that there is evil. - This assumption implies
- If Incompatibilism is true, then there is no God.
- The Problem of Evil How can bad things happen,
if there is an omnipotent, omniscient, and
all-loving person?
17The Atheist Argument from Evil
We can generate an argument for atheism, if we
can establish Incompatibilism
- Incompatibilism If God exists, then bad things
do not happen. - Our Assumption Bad things happen
(C) Atheism God does not exist.
But why think Incompatibilism is true?
18The Antidote Argument for Incompatibilism
God is the antidote to evil
- The Antidote Principle If God exists, then
- He knows when bad things are going to happen
- He is powerful enough to prevent bad things from
happening and - He wants bad things not to happen.
- The Bystander Limitations If a person P does
not prevent something from happening, then
either - She didnt know it would happen
- She wasnt powerful enough to prevent it or
- She didnt want it not to happen.
There are limits on what youll fail to prevent.
(C) Incompatibilism If God exists, then bad
things do not happen.
19Why think the Antidote Principle is true?
- The antidote principle seems to follow from our
specification of what God is supposed to be like. - Omniscience God, if He exists, knows everything
that can be known so (if He exists) He knows
when bad things are going to happen. - Omnipotence God, if He exists, can do anything
that can be done so (if He exists) He can
prevent bad things from happening. - Goodness God, if He exists, loves all of His
creatures so (if He exists) He wants bad things
not to happen to them. - The Antidote Principle is supposed to summarize
these three points.
20The Antidote Argument for Incompatibilism
- The Antidote Principle If God exists, then
- He knows when bad things are going to happen
- He is powerful enough to prevent bad things from
happening and - He wants bad things not to happen.
- The Bystander Limitations If a person P does
not prevent something from happening, then
either - She didnt know it would happen
- She wasnt powerful enough to prevent it or
- She didnt want it not to happen.
Omniscient
Omnipotent
All-loving
(C) Incompatibilism If God exists, then bad
things do not happen.
21Why Think the Bystander Limitations are true?
- The bystander limitations are motivated by a
consideration of cases in which someone allows
something to happen. - The Bystander Limitations admit only three
excuses ignorance, helplessness, and
indifference. - Ignorant bystanders
- Sleeping through a burglary
- Encyclopedia Brown
- Helpless bystanders
- Cannonballs
- Coyote
- Indifferent bystanders
- You let your mother give your child a cookie
- Convenient deafness in a teacher
How could you fail to prevent that from happening?
I didnt know
I couldnt do anything
I didnt care
22The Antidote Argument for Incompatibilism
- The Antidote Principle If God exists, then
- He knows when bad things are going to happen
- He is powerful enough to prevent bad things from
happening and - He wants bad things not to happen.
- The Bystander Limitations If a person P fails
to prevent something from happening, then either - She didnt know it would happen
- She wasnt powerful enough to prevent it or
- She didnt want it not to happen.
Ignorance
Impotence
Indifference
(C) Incompatibilism If God exists, then bad
things do not happen.
23Leibniz
- Gottfried Leibniz
- (1646 1716)
- Leibniz was a mathematician, physicist, and
philosopher. - Leibniz is a compatibilist theist.
24This is the best of all possible worlds
Leibniz argues this world is the best of all
possible worlds.
- Whoever does not choose the best among several
possible alternatives is lacking in power, in
knowledge, or in goodness. - God is not lacking in power, knowledge or
goodness. - God chose to create this world out of all of the
possible worlds he could have created.
(C) This world is the best out of all possible
worlds.
25Leibnizs Argument seems a lot like the Antidote
Argument
Reminds me of
- Whoever does not choose the best among several
possible alternatives is lacking in power, in
knowledge, or in goodness. - God is not lacking in power, knowledge or
goodness. - God chose to create this world out of all of the
possible worlds he could have created.
the Bystander Limitations
the Antidote Principle
(C) This world is the best out of all possible
worlds.
26Leibniz is not (quite) a Pollyanna
- Leibnizs argument looks a lot like the Antidote
Argument for Incompatibilism. - But Leibniz is not an incompatibilist. Hes a
compatibilist. - Leibniz is not a Pollyanna who denies that bad
things happen. - He sounds like one sometimes. (Voltaires
Candide is an extended satire of Leibnizs
Pollyanna-ish tendencies.) - Its really hard to believe that this world is
the best that God could have done. - Leibniz nevertheless admits that bad things do
happen.
27Leibniz Bad Things Happen
The best plan is not always that which seeks
to avoid evil, since it may happen that the evil
is accompanied by a greater good. For example, a
general of an army will prefer a great victory
with a slight wound to a condition without wound
and without victory. (p. 92, col. 1)
- Leibniz claims I may allow something bad to
happen if I think that it is necessary to secure
a greater good. - I will tolerate necessary evils.
- Examples
- the wound is necessary for the victory
- flu shots
- high criminal burden of proof
- Leibnizs Thesis Each bad thing that happens in
this world is necessary to secure a greater good.
28How does this help with the Antidote Argument?
- Leibniz is a compatibilist, so he must think
there is some flaw in the Antidote Argument for
Incompatibilism. - How does the idea of a necessary evil help with
the Antidote Argument? - Leibniz obviously agrees with the Antidote
Principle God does have the knowledge, power,
and desire to prevent evil. - Notice that, in all of our cases of a necessary
evil, we seem to have a counter-example to the
Bystander Limitations - The general allows the wound to happen, even
though he knows it will happen, he could prevent
it, and wants it not to happen. - I allow the prick to happen, even though, etc.
- We allow the guilty to go free, even though, etc.
29Bystander Limitations is False
- The Bystander Limitations If a person P does
not prevent something from happening, then
either - She didnt know it would happen
- She wasnt powerful enough to prevent it or
- She didnt want it not to happen OR
- Allowing it is necessary for her to secure some
greater good.
- Leibniz holds that Bystander Limitations is
simply false. - There is a missing condition we need to allow
for necessary evils. - Once you add this condition, Incompatibilism no
longer follows.
Greater than what? Greater than the badness of
the evil avoided.
30The New Antidote Argument
- The Antidote Principle If God exists, then
- He knows when bad things are going to happen
- He is powerful enough to prevent bad things from
happening and - He wants bad things not to happen.
- The Bystander Limitations If a person P does
not prevent something from happening, then
either - She didnt know it would happen
- She wasnt powerful enough to prevent it or
- She didnt want it not to happen.
- Allowing it is necessary for her to secure some
greater good.
Heres the old Antidote Argument
Heres the new Bystander Limitations
The new argument gets a new conclusion
(C) Incompatibilism If God exists, then bad
things do not happen.
(C) Necessary Evil Compatibilism If God
exists, then bad things do not happen, unless
allowing them to happen is required in order to
secure a greater good.
31Leibnizs Thesis, Amplified
- Leibnizs Thesis Each bad thing that happens in
this world is necessary to secure a greater good. - Notice that this commits Leibniz to idea that
every single instance of evil is justified
because it has wonderful effects. - Theodicy (literally justification of God) a
theodicy is an argument that the existence of
evil is justified. - Leibnizs claim suggests a strategy for theodicy
for any given evil, show that it is necessary to
achieve a greater good. - HOMEWORK Unnecessary Evil Describe an actual
situation in which - something bad happens but
- that bad event is NOT necessary to achieve a
greater good.
32How could evil be required to secure a greater
good?
- Ideas?
- The Free Will Theodicy a world in which some
crabbiness, cruelty, etc., is allowed, but in
which some people choose goodness, kindness,
sweetness and light is better than any world
without crabbiness, cruelty, etc., but in which
God forces his creatures to goodness, kindness,
sweetness, and light. - The Appreciation Theodicy a world in which some
misery is allowed, but in which people appreciate
what contentment they may find is better than any
world full of spoiled but contented ingrates. - Others? (A student once suggested Test of
Faith)
33Compatibilism, Weak and Strong
- Notice that a theist has to establish the
compatibility of Gods existence with the
occurrence of all the bad things that actually
happen. - This is more difficult than just showing that
Gods existence is compatible with the occurrence
bad things in general. - Weak Compatibilism Gods existence is
compatible in principle with the occurrence of
some bad things. - Strong Compatibilism Gods existence is
compatible with the occurrence of all the bad
things that there actually are. - The Strong Compatibilist must show, e.g., that
Gods existence is compatible with the breeding
habits of Ichneumonidae wasps.
"I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and
omnipotent God would have designedly created the
Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their
feeding within the living bodies of Caterpillars,
or that a cat should play with mice." (Charles
Darwin, Letter to American botanist Asa Gray,
source wikipedia entry for Ichneumon)
source http//iris.biosci.ohio-state.edu/catalogs
/ichneumonids/
34Objections from Actual Evil
- What I am going to do now is offer three
objections to Leibnizs theodicies. - Each of these three objections accepts weak
compatibilism the existence of God is
consistent in principle with some bad things
happening. - But these objections start from the idea that
there are particular instances of evil that seem
hard for a theist to handle. - In effect, each objection poses a challenge to
the theist account for this kind of evil. - Our three objections are objections to different
parts of Leibnizs claim.
35Each and every bad thing?
Leibnizs Thesis Each bad thing that happens in
this world is necessary to secure a greater good.
- Leibnizs theodicies require that every actual
instance of evil secures some greater good. - The problem is that there are some bad things
that happen that seem to result in no greater
good theyre totally pointless. - We need to make sure that none of the good
effects required by our theodicies applies. - Free will cannot be involved so we appeal to
natural evil. - Appreciation cannot be involved so we appeal to
evils that no one ever learned anything from. - Examples
- certain birth defects
- 100 fatal prehistoric natural disasters
- You might call this the problem of pointless
suffering.
36Each and every bad thing?
Leibnizs Thesis Each bad thing that happens in
this world is necessary to secure a greater good.
- The theodicy must justify
- The existence of the suffering and
- The extent of the suffering.
- So, there are really two related objections here
- The suffering is pointless the existence of
these evils are not justified by good
consequences and - God seems to be laying it on a bit thick The
extent of these evils does not seem required to
secure the benefits. There seems to be no need
for the suffering to have lasted so long, and
been so severe.
37Is all that evil really necessary?
Leibnizs Thesis Each bad thing that happens in
this world is necessary to secure a greater good.
- Who makes the rules around here, anyway?
- It seems that the laws which require trading an
evil for a greater good are laws that God can
contravene (if He exists). - For example
- The general cant secure a victory without a
wound, but God can - I cant give someone an immunity to the flu
without some discomfort, but God can. - Why cant God secure the benefits without the
pain? - Lets see how this goes for both of the
theodicies we are exploring.
38Is all that evil really necessary? (vs. the Free
Will Theodicy)
Leibnizs Thesis Each bad thing that happens in
this world is necessary to secure a greater good.
- Free Will
- the benefits of free will are secured by the
time the agent executes her decision. - the misery has yet to be caused that requires
cooperation from nature. - a minor miracle could save the benefits and
prevent the evil.
Cause
Misery
Action
- A convenient misfire would have come in handy
- Or a good, stiff cross-breeze.
39Is all that evil really necessary? (vs. the
Appreciation Theodicy)
Leibnizs Thesis Each bad thing that happens in
this world is necessary to secure a greater good.
Gee Willikers, am I a lucky ducky!
- Appreciation Theodicy
- If God exists, it seems to be within his power to
make us appreciate how good we have it without
seeing (or experiencing) misery. - How about movies, or other fake misery, instead
of real misery?
Misery
Causes
Appreciation
40For the greater good? Whose good?
Leibnizs Thesis Each bad thing that happens in
this world is necessary to secure a greater good.
- The idea here is some people bear the costs of
the evil, and others get to reap the benefits. - Free Will Theodicy The perpetrator (the
decider) enjoys the benefits of free will, but
the victim bears the costs. - Appreciation Theodicy The sufferer bears the
costs of, well, suffering, but us lucky folks get
the benefits of appreciating our luck. - But this just seems to be unfair its not the
sort of thing you do to those you love.
41On Adams
- Adams does not endorse Necessary Evil
Compatibilism. - Necessary Evil Compatibilism If God exists,
then bad things do not happen, unless allowing
them to happen is required in order to secure a
greater good. - Adams This world is NOT the best of all possible
worlds. - Since he rejects NE Compatibilism, Adams must
identify some flaw in the NEW Antidote Argument
given by Leibniz.
42The New Antidote Argument
- The Antidote Principle If God exists, then
- He knows when bad things are going to happen
- He is powerful enough to prevent bad things from
happening and - He wants bad things not to happen.
- The Bystander Limitations If a person P does
not prevent something from happening, then
either - She didnt know it would happen
- She wasnt powerful enough to prevent it or
- She didnt want it not to happen.
- Allowing it is necessary for her to secure some
greater good.
(C) Necessary Evil Compatibilism If God
exists, then bad things do not happen, unless
allowing them to happen is required in order to
secure a greater good.
43Adams vs. the Antidote Principle
- Adams seems to reject the Antidote Principle, the
first premise of the argument. - Adams God does not generally mind if bad things
happen. - Whats left of the claim that God is perfectly
good? - Gods goodness, according to Adams, requires only
that - he never be unkind to any of His creatures,
- never wrong one of his creatures, and
- never act in a way that reveals a flaw in His
character. - Being good (for us as well as for God) does not
require that you prevent every bad thing you
could prevent, even when its not a necessary
evil. - Challenge Can you think of a situation in which
someone reveals a flaw in her character without
acting wrongly?
44The Happiness Principle
- People suffer. We are not as happy as we might
otherwise have been. Does it follow that there
is no God? The Happiness Principle says, yes! - The Happiness Principle God would be unkind, act
wrongly, or reveal a flaw in his character if he
created something that is less happy that it
otherwise might have been. - Terminology
- Someone is maximally happy she is as happy as
it is possible for her to be. - An act A is ungodly performing A is unkind,
wrong, or reveals a flaw in ones character. - The Happiness Principle 2.0 It would be ungodly
of God to create someone who is not maximally
happy. - Adams rejects the Happiness Principle.
- What reasons can there be for doing so?
45The Anti-Max Argument
Warning This is a simpler argument that the one
Adams actually gives!
- Anti-Max If it is not ungodly to create any
creature at all, then it is not ungodly to create
a creature who is not maximally happy. - Creation is not ungodly it is not ungodly to
create a creature.
(C) It is not ungodly to create a creature who is
not maximally happy.
There is also a direct argument for this
conclusion from cases. I, for instance, am not as
happy as its possible for me to be, but I
certainly dont think it would be ungodly for
someone to have created me.
This is just the negation of the Happiness
Principle
46Why believe that creation is not ungodly?
- Why believe the second premise of the Anti-Max
Argument? - George Baileys Principle No creature is so
miserable that it would have been better for that
creature if it had never existed. - An upshot creating a creature is doing that
creature a favor. - Notice doing someone a favor does not wrong
them, is not unkind, and does not reveal a flaw
in your character.
47Why Think Anti-Max is True?
Anti-Max If it is not ungodly to create any
creature at all, then it is not ungodly to create
a creature who is not maximally happy.
- Suppose that potential happiness knows no
bounds. - This means no matter how happy some creature
is, it is possible that the creature have been
even happier. - Compare Could God create a creature who is
maximally tall (i.e. as tall as it possibly
could be)? - If potential happiness knows no bounds, God could
not create a creature at all without creating a
creature that is not maximally happy. - Anti-Max follows.
48More on George Baileys Principle
George Baileys Principle No creature is so
miserable that it would have been better for that
creature if it had never existed.
- Note George Baileys Principle is independent
of the anti-euthanasia claim we might call - Terry Schiavos Principle No creatures life
becomes so miserable that it would have been
better for that creature if its life had been
shorter. - (I have no opinion about whether Terry Schiavo
would have endorsed Terry Schiavos Principle.) - How is George Baileys Principle motivated?
- No Creature, No Goodness for that creature if
the creature had never existed, then there would
have been no such thing as how good it was for
that creature. - Hence, it would be false to say that it would
have been better for the creature never to have
existed.
49Adamss Optimistic View
- Adamss idea is this
- Each of us endures some measure of suffering.
- But its worth it our lives, on a whole, are
worth living, even with the suffering. - In being given our lives, we have been given
something that is, on balance, a blessing. - If God has done wrong in giving us lives like
this, then whom has he wronged? Not any of us,
who are lucky to have been created. - If God has been unkind to anyone, then to whom
was he unkind? Not any of us, to whom he has
given something that is, on the whole, valuable. - And where, exactly, has God revealed a flaw in
His character? - Compare your parents give you 300, even though
they know that this may cause you some stress.