Chany
Uncertain Absurdist
- Nov 29, 2011
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Most overused word in online debate history. Watch a real debate and debaters are very careful to use the term, because usually it amounts to a non-argument. That aside...
I actually think this is a good argument. To be omni-benevolent, it would seem, the being would have to be loving to every single things.
However, if we have an universe with meat eaters and herbivores, it seems to me to defy the laws of non-contradiction that an omni-benevolent being would deprive one animal so it would starve, but protect the other animal so it is not eaten. You might argue, well, get rid of eating meat. Well, have you every eaten meat? It tastes great.
So, now we get into obvious subjective stuff. Is it better that I can enjoy meat but animals suffer, or vice versa?
This is when our inability to actually know what is best prevents us from asserting that we could actually do better if we were all powerful. AN omnsicent being's omnibenevolence cannot look like how we think it would look. That would stand to reason.
So, though you say you are not, you obviously are approaching the problem with man as the center. You presume humanity and human ethics as moral standards, and then judge a higher being to them. This is obviously flawed.
I disagree with the premise, because we already know of acts of love that result from the existence of evil (i.e. forgiveness), so how could a being be omnibenevolent if there are acts of benevolence it will never act upon?
So, I can't tell you this necessitates evil, but I can confidently tell you that we cannot determine that it definitely necessitates the lack of evil either.
You misrepresent my position as anthrocenteric and proceed to knock it down. I declare strawman fallacy. I may be mistaken in practice, but not in principle.
First, your point on meat eating:
The argument against having a world of only herbivores is a dismissive joke. Even assuming the carnivores and herbivore dilemma, there is no reason why the animals cannot be provided their needs through moral means by an omnipotent being.
On to the charge of anthrocentricism:
I declared conscious beings. There may be different levels of conscious, but anything conscious applies. This includes animals, angels, aliens, and the being itself. The needs can be different, but they still persist. All can be met by omnipotent and omniscient being in a moral way.
I use humans because they are the most complex beings I've met and have the most needs, and because it is our class of being.
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