True Scotsman
Objectivist
I know there some other threads about evil, but I didn't see one specifically looking for a non-Christian answer to the question. Christians have an easy answer to the question of why there is evil. I'd like to hear non-Christian answers to why you think there is evil in the world (deftly avoiding how a non-Christian defines what "evil" is). Thanks.
Hi dysert,
I'll give you the Objectivist perspective.
I don't have any trouble defining what evil is. I define evil as not only something that is harmful to man's life qua man but more. I think that an essential component is the element of choice. There has to be choice involved. In other words it has to be a choice to do something that one knows is wrong. If I accidentally harm someone then it is not evil. I didn't intend to do anyone harm. If I choose to harm someone then that is.
You might ask now how a non-Christian knows what is wrong from what is right. That's easy. Anything which destroys life or makes it unlivable and is done intentionally is wrong. That which supports life and affirms it is the good. You see, for an Objectivist, life is the standard by which all values are judged. Man requires certain things in order to live. Life is a purposeful struggle for values. It requires a specific course of action and any other course of action will destroy it. This is the basis for an objective morality. For an Objectivist, morality is not handed down from a god or decided by the majority or the society but is based on man's nature as a rational being and the requirements for him to flourish and live a full and happy life.
Natural disasters like rock slides, hurricanes, lightning strikes, plagues, shark attacks and meteor strikes are not evil. They are tragic and horrible but they are not evil. Since "evil" is a moral concept, and the moral is the chosen, then there has to be volition for something to rise to the level of evil.
There is the answer. There is evil because men have free will and they sometimes choose to do bad things.
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