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Defining evil

Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

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Page 1: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Defining evil

Page 2: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Defining evil

Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Page 3: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some Categories:

Passive evil--physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation (lacking freedom is an evil even if it is not continuously experienced as physically or psychologically painful)

Page 4: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some Categories:

Passive evil--physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation (lacking freedom is an evil even if it is not continuously experienced as physically or psychologically painful)

Active evil--the causes of pain, suffering, and deprivation

Page 5: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some Categories:

Passive evil--physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation (lacking freedom is an evil even if it is not continuously experienced as physically or psychologically painful)

Active evil--the causes of pain, suffering, and deprivation

Moral evil--actions taken that cause suffering or left undone that would have alleviated it.

Page 6: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some Categories:

Passive evil--physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation (lacking freedom is an evil even if it is not continuously experienced as physically or psychologically painful)

Active evil--the causes of pain, suffering, and deprivation

Moral evil--actions taken that cause suffering or left undone that would have alleviated it.

Natural evil--events in the natural world that cause pain and suffering

Page 7: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some qualifications:

Page 8: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some qualifications:

Natural evil is often mixed with and made worse by human choices (populating areas prone to natural disaster--hurricanes, wildfires--is in part a result of human choices, though perhaps not the totally free choice of those living in the dangerous areas).

Page 9: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some qualifications:

Natural evil is often mixed with and made worse by human choices (populating areas prone to natural disaster--hurricanes, wildfires--is in part a result of human choices, though perhaps not the totally free choice of those living in the dangerous areas).

Human actions or inaction that results in suffering often does so unintentionally--ignorance. Is suffering that results from ignorance an instance of moral evil (we should have known better) or an instance of natural evil (human ignorance is a fact of nature rather like volcanic activity)?

Page 10: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some qualifications:

Natural evil is often mixed with and made worse by human choices (populating areas prone to natural disaster--hurricanes, wildfires--is in part a result of human choices, though perhaps not the totally free choice of those living in the dangerous areas).

Human actions or inaction that results in suffering often does so unintentionally--ignorance. Is suffering that results from ignorance an instance of moral evil (we should have known better) or an instance of natural evil (human ignorance is a fact of nature rather like volcanic activity)?

Some suffering results from countless small, perhaps legitimate acts--structural evil

Page 11: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Responding to the challenge of evil

First response--frame the question as:What good is evil?

Page 12: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Responding to the challenge of evil

First response--frame the question as:What good is evil?

Suffering is bad in itself, but it can lead to greater good. It has instrumental value.

Page 13: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Responding to the challenge of evil

First response--frame the question as:What good is evil?

Suffering is bad in itself, but it can lead to greater good. It has instrumental value.

This could account for natural evil: Developing virtue requires facing challenges. God created a challenging environment so that we could develop these virtues.

Page 14: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Challenges to the “instrumental” defense

Page 15: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Challenges to the “instrumental” defense

There is often no correspondence between particular instances of suffering and character development. Indeed some suffering is so intense that it leads to permanent psychological damage, making character development impossible. There is superfluous, unredeemed evil.

Page 16: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Challenges to the “instrumental” defense

There is often no correspondence between particular instances of suffering and character development. Indeed some suffering is so intense that it leads to permanent psychological damage, making character development impossible. There is superfluous, unredeemed evil.

Does virtue require challenge?

Page 17: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Challenges to the “instrumental” defense

There is often no correspondence between particular instances of suffering and character development. Indeed some suffering is so intense that it leads to permanent psychological damage, making character development impossible. There is superfluous, unredeemed evil.

Does virtue require challenge?•Can virtue be learned without challenge?

Page 18: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Challenges to the “instrumental” defense

There is often no correspondence between particular instances of suffering and character development. Indeed some suffering is so intense that it leads to permanent psychological damage, making character development impossible. There is superfluous, unredeemed evil.

Does virtue require challenge?•Can virtue be learned without challenge?•Is virtue gained through struggle better than virtue simply given?

Page 19: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Challenges to the “instrumental” defense

There is often no correspondence between particular instances of suffering and character development. Indeed some suffering is so intense that it leads to permanent psychological damage, making character development impossible. There is superfluous, unredeemed evil.

Does virtue require challenge?•Can virtue be learned without challenge?•Is virtue gained through struggle better than virtue simply given?•Is struggled-for virtue worth all this pain?

Page 20: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Instrumental defense in summary:

Suffering can have good results—maybe this is why God allows it.

Page 21: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Instrumental defense in summary:

Suffering can have good results—maybe this is why God allows it.

• But why allow the suffering that doesn’t have good results—and maybe can’t?

Page 22: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Instrumental defense in summary:

Suffering can have good results—maybe this is why God allows it.

• But why allow the suffering that doesn’t have good results—and maybe can’t?

• And why not just make us with these good characteristics rather than use suffering to develop them?

Page 23: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

We’ve considered a possible explanation for natural evil--the instrumental value of pain and suffering. What about moral evil--human choices that result in pain and suffering?

Page 24: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Moral Evil

Page 25: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Moral Evil

The importance of freedom--the Free Will Defense

Page 26: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Moral Evil

The importance of freedom--the Free Will Defense

Freedom requires the ability to do otherwise--to freely do good requires the ability to do evil

Page 27: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Moral Evil

The importance of freedom--the Free Will Defense

Freedom requires the ability to do otherwise--to freely do good requires the ability to do evil

Human freedom is so important to God that God risked that we would do evil in order to insure the good that we be free.

Page 28: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some questions and concerns about the nature and value of freedom:

Page 29: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some questions and concerns about the nature and value of freedom:

God didn’t risk that we would do evil. God is omniscient, so God knew, at creation, that we would do evil. And went ahead with it.

Page 30: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some questions and concerns about the nature and value of freedom:

God didn’t risk that we would do evil. God is omniscient, so God knew, at creation, that we would do evil. And went ahead with it.

Is the ability to do otherwise really necessary for freedom? Can I freely choose what I was destined to do?

Page 31: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some questions and concerns about the nature and value of freedom:

God didn’t risk that we would do evil. God is omniscient, so God knew, at creation, that we would do evil. And went ahead with it.

Is the ability to do otherwise really necessary for freedom? Can I freely choose what I was destined to do?

Is the relationship between freedom and evil something God was bound by or a relationship that God created?

Page 32: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some questions and concerns about the nature and value of freedom:

God didn’t risk that we would do evil. God is omniscient, so God knew, at creation, that we would do evil. And went ahead with it.

Is the ability to do otherwise really necessary for freedom? Can I freely choose what I was destined to do?

Is the relationship between freedom and evil something God was bound by or a relationship that God created?

Why are freely good beings so much more valuable than beings determined to be good? I’ve tried to raise my kids so that goodness is second-nature, not something they have to consciously choose each time. That early shaping wasn’t their choice, and their actions now are a result of that shaping. Are they freely good (assuming they are good)?

Page 33: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Some questions and concerns about the nature and value of freedom:

God didn’t risk that we would do evil. God is omniscient, so God knew, at creation, that we would do evil. And went ahead with it.

Is the ability to do otherwise really necessary for freedom? Can I freely choose what I was destined to do?

Is the relationship between freedom and evil something God was bound by or a relationship that God created?

Why are freely good beings so much more valuable than beings determined to be good? I’ve tried to raise my kids so that goodness is second-nature, not something they have to consciously choose each time. That early shaping wasn’t their choice, and their actions now are a result of that shaping. Are they freely good (assuming they are good)?

Why not intervene is the extreme cases? In general freedom is valuable. But is it so valuable that God might not have intervened in a few individual choices that resulted in massive suffering?

Page 34: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

How shall we think about structural evil?

Page 35: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

How shall we think about structural evil?

Often massive evil is only possible if countless individually justifiable actions contribute.

Page 36: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

How shall we think about structural evil?

Often massive evil is only possible if countless individually justifiable actions contribute.

The German railroad switch operator in 1942 is just trying to keep his family fed and housed through very hard times. But his work is part of a larger system that is contributing to the murder of millions.

Page 37: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

How shall we think about structural evil?

Often massive evil is only possible if countless individually justifiable actions contribute.

The German railroad switch operator in 1942 is just trying to keep his family fed and housed through very hard times. But his work is part of a larger system that is contributing to the murder of millions.

Parents understandably want the best education (safest neighborhood, etc) for their kids. But the good schools/safe neighborhoods are often in areas too expensive for low-income families. When middle class families leave economically mixed areas, they pull resources from those schools leaving them worse for the low-income kids left behind. (White flight)

Page 38: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

How shall we think about structural evil?

Often massive evil is only possible if countless individually justifiable actions contribute.

The German railroad switch operator in 1942 is just trying to keep his family fed and housed through very hard times. But his work is part of a larger system that is contributing to the murder of millions.

Parents understandably want the best education (safest neighborhood, etc) for their kids. But the good schools/safe neighborhoods are often in areas too expensive for low-income families. When middle class families leave economically mixed areas, they pull resources from those schools leaving them worse for the low-income kids left behind. (White flight)

I understandably try to save money on clothing (food, household items, etc) and as a result I end up buying clothes sewn by exploited labor.

Page 39: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

In such cases, evil seems to be inherent in the very structure of society, and less easily identifiable with individual human choices.

Page 40: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

In such cases, evil seems to be inherent in the very structure of society, and less easily identifiable with individual human choices.

Do either of the approaches we’ve considered--virtue requires struggle, or genuine goodness requires the freedom to do evil--address structural evil?

Page 41: Defining evil. Physical and emotional pain and suffering or deprivation and their causes

Reading for next week

• Vel Ch 5

• William James Will to Believe http://infomotions.com/etexts/philosophy/1800-1899/james-will-751.txt