GDon
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2013
- Messages
- 1,567
They do, but once atheists are allowing for theists to use their own definitions in the premises, then the validity of those arguments follows.But most if not all theists insist that their god is good, and many outline evils that are anathema to that god, with scriptures and such that emphasize the objective reality of good and evil.
We atheists can say there's no such thing as objective evil, but theists have to eat their own dogfood.
For example: can an omnipotent being create a rational universe in which 1=1 and 1=2 are both true simultaneously?
(1) If the answer is "no", then:
An omnipotent and omnibenevolent being must allow people to make free-will choices if this results in a greater good. Thus the answer to the dilemma is that "God is unable and unwilling to prevent evil, since by His nature He must allow the greater good."
(2) If the answer is "yes", then:
An omnipotent being could make a universe in which evil is not evil. Thus the answer is "God is willing and able, and in fact this universe has no evil, since evil is not evil."
Perfectly valid arguments, though not sound since the premises are not proven.