As a philosophy grad student, I wrote a paper where the gist was that the argument from evil doesn't work as a proof against God's existence because it aggressively asserts the existence of transcendent, objective moral truths about the universe; if one argues that evil exists, truly and actually, then they are also necessarily asserting the existence of moral truths or a moral order.
And the existence of a moral order or transcend moral truths, I held, left little room for atheism.
These thoughts actually far preceded the paper; when I was struggling with what I believed, I often thought about the fact that in my heart of hearts I believed that certain deeds were evil. If there is true evil in the world, then I thought, then morality is not relative or subjective. Therefore, morality must be transcendent and objective, which would mean that there most be a transcendent and objective moral truth.
And for such to exist, then God must exist, for objective and transcendent truths don't simply accidentally wander into existence do they? For these moral pronouncements to truly rise above subjectivity, they must have surely been pronounced by an objective, transcendent, omnipotent mind. Moral laws that are supposed to simply "exist" ultimately imply no objective rubric of anything, do they? Though they might prescribe certain behaviors, they'd carry no more weight--regardless of how we apprehended them or the consequences for not abiding them--than a person's interpretation of the meaning of a pile of leaves scattered by the wind.
My professor wasn't persuaded by this. However, I would be curious what other people thought of this.
And the existence of a moral order or transcend moral truths, I held, left little room for atheism.
These thoughts actually far preceded the paper; when I was struggling with what I believed, I often thought about the fact that in my heart of hearts I believed that certain deeds were evil. If there is true evil in the world, then I thought, then morality is not relative or subjective. Therefore, morality must be transcendent and objective, which would mean that there most be a transcendent and objective moral truth.
And for such to exist, then God must exist, for objective and transcendent truths don't simply accidentally wander into existence do they? For these moral pronouncements to truly rise above subjectivity, they must have surely been pronounced by an objective, transcendent, omnipotent mind. Moral laws that are supposed to simply "exist" ultimately imply no objective rubric of anything, do they? Though they might prescribe certain behaviors, they'd carry no more weight--regardless of how we apprehended them or the consequences for not abiding them--than a person's interpretation of the meaning of a pile of leaves scattered by the wind.
My professor wasn't persuaded by this. However, I would be curious what other people thought of this.