timtofly
One Day
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2009
- Messages
- 9,445
Why would you have to remove bad consequences to remove evil? I could jump off a cliff because I misunderstand the laws of nature, but that is not an evil act. Evil is the willful attempt to do something that harms; which is why people always try to argue that they didn't know what the results of their actions would be. If they truly did not know, then the act can not be considered evil.
@timtofly
Sorry, I'm not really sure what the thesis of your post is and how exactly you disagree with what I said.
I'm talking about removing evil from the universe permanently, which would also remove our knowledge of it.
I might also be wrong.. have been thinking about it. It's hard to think about because it's impossible to just remove evil from the universe..
Evil is for the most part unavoidable, as most assume evil.
Evil does not always happen from a willful act either. Galdre's point was a willful attempt. Even the first attempt was willful, even though the intent was not to harm. The consequence is still the same though. I agree with you that it is impossible to remove the result. Evil may or may not be the intent. Calling evil only the result of intent does not follow.
You are correct in that knowledge is the key. If the consequence was removed, so would the knowledge by default. If evil was removed we would live in a deterministic universe, where only good happened. There would be no reason to chose, because no matter what the choice, the outcome would be the same? Not necessarily. Science has proved that multiple outcomes are acceptable. What we remove is bad things happening.
Even when bad things happen we have the ability to move on. Our existance does not end. Even people who worry that it will, are unable to change their opinions about the matter, because even worrying produces the same result as those who do not worry. Even the ability to avoid evil is self determinism, but avoiding evil does not change the fact that evil can still happen in the future.
If someone were to shoot another person willfully or not willfully in the face and the bullitt never did any harm, that would not be a natural event. If a person were to jump off the cliff and float down, that would not be a natural event. I am quite sure that unless the knowledge were removed also, that the human brain would not be able to process said events rationally. IMO neither can we rationalize the supernatural by natural means. I am not sure we could even rationalize the removal of evil from the universe, without removing the knowledge that it exist first.