They are good insofar as they feel good to the person experiencing them or lead to other people feeling good. The opposite for bad things.
Well, hatred and greed feel good for some people, but I wouldn't argue that they are good. I suppose it can be argued that they lead to more bad than good, which might make them a net "bad."
You're not reading what I wrote. We have no way of knowing whether this coma patient is suffering physical pain, is experiencng terrible nightmares or ecstatically beautiful dreams. He can't communicate to us and will not recover to tell us about his experiences. So his plight cannot affect or inspire anyone.
I beg to differ. Just because the coma victim can't communicate doesn't mean that his plight cannot affect or inspire others. Perhaps he has a young family member who visits him and decides to find a cure in order to help him. I would say the family member was inspired by his situation, if not by him directly. Therefore, the coma may have been for a greater good.
I don't understand why feeling compassion for someone would be considered a good thing in itself. OK, it can be a pleasant feeling, but not greatly so. Surely the main reason compassion is good is because it inspires action that leads to a reduction in suffering, so we are back to judging things on the basis of suffering/pleasure. But this is all irrelevant in this case. You can't feel compassion for another's suffering if you don't know that they are suffering.
I didn't say that feeling compassion without action is necessarily good (although it could be argued that it is). But helping to make the coma patient comfortable, and even talking to the patient might be good. That said, you are wrong that we cannot feel compassion for a coma patient because we don't know if they are suffering. We generally assume that they are suffering
because they cannot communicate or move. You made this same assumption by choosing the coma patient as an example, because if they weren't suffering then your example falls apart (the coma isn't bad at all by your definition).
Unless you can think of a way in which this might be so it is as idle as saying that the moon might be made of cheese. After all an omnipotent God could surely arrange this (the cheese is just below the suface, which is why we've not seen it). If I declare that the moon is not made of cheese is this just an "opinion"?
There is a difference between the statement "the moon is not made of green cheese" and "it is
impossible that the moon is made of green cheese." The former is perhaps an opinion, but the latter is stated as fact. Since we have some evidence that the moon is not cheese (we've been there), the former can be backed up by evidence, but there is no evidence of the latter statement (since the only evidence that something is impossible is proof that it's not possible). I would never say that it's
impossible for the moon to be made of green cheese for (among others) the very reasons you gave. I would also never say that it's impossible that all suffering serves a greater good.
People have been trying for hundreds of years to get round the PoE argument against the existence of an omnipotent, omnibenevolent God.
They have, and quite successfully. You should do a bit of reading on the subject. The problem with the PoE is that a defense of it bears the burden of proof since it makes a positive claim. In order to prove the PoE you must show that an omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent God is
impossible. Arguments such as the "greater good" argument demonstrate that an omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent God is
possible.
If there was a knock-down argument against it would be common knowledge and would be parroted, ad nauseam, by all theists.
These arguments are parroted, ad nauseum, by some theists (perhaps not all) every time the PoE is brought up (usually after some natural disaster or a news story about a person suffering). I don't know what a "knock-down" argument against the PoE would consist of, other than showing that it's conclusion is possibly wrong, in which case there are many knock-down arguments against the PoE.
There is no such argument. The PoE shows that an omnipotent, omnibenevolent God is incompatible with the world we live in.
Sorry, wrong. The PoE has been argued in various forms for hundreds of years, and never has it been shown that an omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent God is incompatible with the world we live in.
For more sophisticated theists this is not a problem - they have more subtle versions of God that are not affected by this argument. But the vast majority of Christians do assume that their God is both omnipotent and omnibenevolent and they are wrong. Such a God cannot exist.
Such a God
may not exist, but to say that such a God
cannot exist is a vast overstatement.
Again, if you can provide a single real-life example of human suffering that could not possibly have served a greater good, then I'll concede that the "greater good" argument against the PoE doesn't hold water. Since you claim that there are "countless" examples, it should be a piece of cake to prove me wrong.
-Bri