The Problem of Evil-1-1.docx - Module 7: The Problem of...

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Module 7: The Problem of Evil Readings: Fyodor Dostoyevsky, The Rebellion J.L. Mackie, Evil and Omnipotence St. Augustine, Divine Foreknowledge and Free Will St. Thomas Aquinas, Is God's Power Limited? Part I: The Problem of Evil InThe Brothers Karmazov, the great Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881) dramatically sets the stage for a philosophical discussion of the problem of evil. Why, Dostoevsky asks, does God allow most innocent among us to suffer? Why the children? “Listen! I took the case of children only to make my case clearer. Of the other tears of humanity with which the earth is soaked from its crust to its center, I will say nothing. I have narrowed my subject on purpose. I am a bug, and I recognize in all humility that I cannot understand why the world is arranged as it is. Men are themselves to blame, I suppose; they were given paradise, they wanted freedom, and stole fire from heaven, though they knew they would become unhappy, so there is no need to pity them. With my pitiful, earthly, Euclidian understanding, all I know is that there is suffering and that there are none guilty; that cause follows effect, simply and directly; that everything flows and finds its level—but that’s only Euclidian nonsense, I know that, and I can’t consent to live by it! What comfort is it to me that there are none guilty and that cause follows effect simply and directly, and that I know it—I must have justice, or I will destroy myself. And not justice in some remote infinite time and space, but here on earth, and that I could see myself. I have believed in it. I want to see it, and if I am dead by then, let me rise again, for if it all happens without me, it will be too unfair. Surely I haven’t suffered simply that I, my crimes and my sufferings, may manure the soil of the future harmony for somebody else. I want to see with my own eyes the hind lie down with the lion8 and the victim rise up and embrace his murderer. I want to be there when everyone suddenly understands what it has all been for. All the religions of the world are built on this longing, and I am a believer. But then there are the children, and what am I to do about them? That’s a question I can’t answer. For the hundredth time I repeat, there are numbers of questions, but I’ve only taken the children, because in their case what I mean is so unanswerably clear. Listen! If all must suffer to pay for the eternal harmony, what have children to do with it, tell me, please? It’s beyond all comprehension why they should suffer, and why they should pay for the harmony. Why should they, too, furnish material to enrich the soil for the harmony of the future? (Dostoyevsky, The Rebellion) The problem of evil may be set out as follows. [1] If God is omniscient, then He knows that evil exists. (premise)
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