Personal Theodicy Apologetics
The problem of evil is something everyone has to face sooner or later. As Schlesinger points out, philosophers want to understand “why there is any suffering in the world at all.”[footnoteRef:2] The problem with a philosophical approach to suffering is that it does not reveal the whole story or the whole picture of why suffering (evil) exists. Religion, on the other hand, does provide that whole story—and depending on the religion, the story will be a little different. Christianity teaches that evil is a result of sin—that it is not something… Continue Reading...
What is George Schlesinger’s main solution to the problem of evil? (Make sure to discuss centrally the role the concept of the ‘DDS’ plays, and how he uses the principle of ‘ought implies can,’ and what that principle means.)
DDS refers to the degree of desirability of state of a being and that the problem of evil disappears when one considers that one’s happiness can be increased without limit. The principle that “ought implies can” refers to the idea that if a being ought to behave a certain way, the means for that being to behave in that… Continue Reading...
choice of evil acts. [8: Howard-Snyder, Daniel. "The Logical Problem of Evil: Mackie and Plantinga." The Blackwell Companion to the Problem of Evil, 2014, 19-33.]
Nature and Existence of Evil
Evil is often exhibited in two forms. The first form of evil is natural. The natural forms of evil constitute all forms of evils that are caused by natural calamities such as flooding, earthquakes, diseases, and famine among others[footnoteRef:9]. The second form of evil is one that is caused by human actions. These constitute all actions of individuals that may cause pain and suffering to other people. [9: Melchert,… Continue Reading...
the facts of history and experience that give rise to the problem this course calls the problem of evil?
The facts of history and experience that give rise to the problem of evil are primarily war, pain, death—i.e., suffering. This is what Lewis describes as the problem of pain: Why would a good God create a world wherein people suffer and are doomed to die? Why does it seem, moreover, that innocent people suffer? These are the questions that Lewis asks, noting in particularly that “all civilisations pass away and, even while they remain, inflict peculiar sufferings of their own probably sufficient to outweigh what alleviations… Continue Reading...