You didn't answer my question. Would you, as a parent, allow your children to jump off a cliff, to teach them through experience?
I wanted to make a point first, but I'll be more direct this time. You didn't address my request in post #22, and you changed the issue I was addressing in post #24. You changed it from A) "Can evil occur inside the boundaries a person sets, and the person still dislike that evil?" to B) "Did the person set the proper boundaries?"
The answer to your question is an obvious, "No," for me, but if you think that at all impacts the answer to question A above, it doesn't. We needn't go to such extremes, and as I was trying to point out, even at those extremes people can imagine "acceptable" circumstances. When young, my kids seemed to have an inordinate love for sticks and rocks. At first I stopped them from poking things with the sticks and throwing rocks at things. Somewhere along the way I no longer enforced that restriction. Did I pick the right time to give them that freedom? Some may say I didn't. We made more than one trip to the doctor as a result.
Yet, at no time did I think poking someone in the eye with a stick was a good thing.
Definitions of "choice" from Merrian-Webster. Please pick exactly which definition you are referring to:
I would say "a range of things that can be chosen" is closest, though it might be better to say "a range of things that are possible" since it avoids the circularity of using "chosen" to define "choice".
Can God create a boulder he cannot lift? Can God make square circles? The answer is no, not because any limit upon the power of a God, but because of the contradiction. Something cannot be a square and a circle; they are two logically separate categories. A requirement for a square, such as having four sides, can never be achieved by a circle, as a circle only has one true side.
And so you're insisting that a god can't be omnimoral. I disagree. Whether God is omnimoral is a different question, but it is certainly possible to imagine an omnimoral god. In the same way, I can imagine an all-loving god or an all-powerful god ... and yet that may not describe God. This conversation could be one large strawman. If those are the conditions you want to discuss, fine, but as for me I wouldn't be interested.
Hence, I need to know what you think that means, and why it applies to God.
Nothing can make love, hate, and make hate, love; they are two different categories of things.
I can only think of two things you might be saying here:
1) If I have an emotion of hate (e.g. "I hate cauliflower") it would be a logical contradiction for someone to insist that means I love cauliflower. I would agree, but that is not what we're discussing ... at least that's not what I was discussing. Because, again, if a god says I must eat cauliflower before I enter his presence, and if I wish to enter his presence, it is irrelevant whether or not I hate cauliflower.
2) You're advocating some kind of moral absolute. That would surprise me, but if you are you'll need to explain why a god cannot encompass that moral absolute.
3) Maybe you mean something I haven't thought of. Please clarify.