Originally posted by Ayatollah So
That's all fine and dandy, but how does it relate to the topic "the source of evil"? Are you one of these people who think free will has to be inherently random, or uncertain? And therefore that there is no way even for a Deity to know whether a free person will do evil?
If so, why?
I believe that we have free will because I perceive that I make decisions about the way I live my life every day, and some of those decisions work out well and some don't work out so well. Some are consistent with my ideals and some -- hopefully less and less as I get older and wiser -- are inconsistent w/ my ideals. I am tempted to do things that are apparently in my short-term interest but risky or selfish or self-destructive in the long run, and sometimes I give into my temptations.
When I do so, I feel bad (on some lvl) even when I get away w/ it. My opinion is that "death," in the spiritual sense, is the death of the soul. My goal is to attain the wisdom to understand what actions result in the slow hemorrhaging of my self-respect, and stanch the flow. In the process, I believe that I will become a better person, a person who gives more to society as a whole, and takes less.
Spiritual death is the evil, or the consequence of the evil, that this thread was created to explore.
From a scientific standpoint I feel that the deterministic anti-free will viewpoint has been refuted by quantum mechanics. It's not completely random, but it's random enough that we can't justify the order of the Universe as a deterministic clock-work in which we are mere cogs.
But ultimately science and spirituality are different constructs, designed to answer different questions. Science defines what we can and cannot control or know in the physical sense. But spirituality is the one thing that we always have control over -- our own choices. When we choose well, we are spiritually fulfilled. We inch closer to heaven or Nirvana. When we choose poorly, we undermine our own well-being, and often impact others. That drags us closer to hell.
I'm not a moralist in the stereotypical Christian sense. I am not homophobic or opposed to sex before marriage or pro-life or anti-Theory of Evolution or pro-family values. I think that often people should do what works for them as long as it doesn't hurt others. But I think there is a place for religion in people's lives. I reject the idea that religion is necessarily wrong-minded. I think that just is as narrow-minded as homophobia.
There certainly are some valid Universal moral principles that defy the idea of moral relativism -- but not very many. Non-violence and mutual respect for rights, common assets and private property pretty much sums it up. Everything else is a matter of personal taste.
God is the entire Universe, and the Godliest of decisions would be akin to making a perfect pool shot where one sinks every ball, eight ball last and calls the hole where the eight-ball will end up before taking the shot. AND not in a competition -- as an exhibition. God is absolutely good, omniscient and all-powerful. Because God is absolutely good, any Godly decision is all-good, in harmony w/ the Universe -- win-win.
God is the master of win-win decisions.
Since God is all-powerful, God COULD force humanity, each being, to make all good decisions. But then humans would cease to be distinct f/ God. Apparently God wants us, for whatever reason, to make our own decisions even though many of them will be far from perfect. In choosing, we determine* our own fate.
*Because God is all-powerful God COULD choose our fate for us as well, but because God is all-good God I believe that God honors the Covenant outlined above. God is not beholden to man, but will serve humans who demonstrate virtue and character out of love.