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{{Short description|Reconciling the existence of evil with an all-good and all-powerful God}}
{{God}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2011}} {{Use dmy dates|date=July 2019}}
{{Philosophy of religion sidebar |expanded=Challenges}}
{{atheism2}}
{{Theodicy}}
{{Philosophy of religion (sidebar)}}


In the ], the '''problem of evil''' is the question of how to reconcile the existence of ] with that of a ] who is, in either absolute or relative terms, ], ], and ] (see ]).<ref name="Stanford">The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "", Michael Tooley</ref><ref name="IepEvidential">The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "", Nick Trakakis</ref> An '''argument from evil''' attempts to show that the co-existence of evil and such a deity is unlikely or impossible if placed in absolute terms. Attempts to show the contrary have traditionally been discussed under the heading of ]. The '''problem of evil''' is the philosophical question of how to reconcile the existence of ] and ] with an ], ], and ] ].<ref name="Tuling 2020">{{cite book |author-last=Tuling |author-first=Kari H. |year=2020 |chapter=Part 1: Is God the Creator and Source of All Being – Including Evil? |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EzfsDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA3 |editor-last=Tuling |editor-first=Kari H. |title=Thinking about God: Jewish Views |location=] and ] |publisher=]/] |series=JPS Essential Judaism Series |pages=3–64 |doi=10.2307/j.ctv13796z1.5 |isbn=978-0-8276-1848-0 |s2cid=241611417 |lccn=2019042781}}</ref><ref name="Stanford">The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "", Michael Tooley</ref><ref name="IepEvidential">The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "", Nick Trakakis</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Calian |first=Florin George |date=2024-07-18 |title=Editorial RES 1/2024: Religion and the Problem of Evil (I) Religion und das Problem des Bösen (I) |url=https://sciendo.com/article/10.2478/ress-2024-0001 |journal=Review of Ecumenical Studies |language=en |volume=16 |issue=1 |pages=5–7 |doi=10.2478/ress-2024-0001}}</ref> There are currently differing definitions of these concepts. The best known presentation of the problem is attributed to the Greek philosopher ]. It was popularized by ].


A wide range of responses have been given to the problem of evil in theology. There are also many discussions of evil and associated problems in other philosophical fields, such as ],<ref>Nicholas J. Rengger, ''Moral Evil and International Relations'', in '']'' 25:1, Winter/Spring 2005, pp. 3–16</ref><ref>Peter Kivy, ''Melville's Billy and the Secular Problem of Evil: the Worm in the Bud'', in '']'' (1980), 63</ref><ref>{{cite book Besides the ], the problem of evil is also important to the fields of ] and ]. There are also many discussions of evil and associated problems in other philosophical fields, such as ],<ref>Nicholas J. Rengger, ''Moral Evil and International Relations'', in '']'' 25:1, Winter/Spring 2005, pp. 3–16</ref><ref>Peter Kivy, ''Melville's Billy and the Secular Problem of Evil: the Worm in the Bud'', in '']'' (1980), 63</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Kekes |first=John |author-link=John Kekes |title=Facing Evil |publisher=Princeton UP |year=1990 |location=Princeton |url=https://archive.org/details/facingevil0000keke |isbn=978-0-691-07370-5 }}</ref> and ].<ref>Timothy Anders, ''The Evolution of Evil'' (2000)</ref><ref>{{cite book|first1=Lawrence C. |last1=Becker |first2=Charlotte B. |last2=Becker |title= Encyclopedia of Ethics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KfeOAQAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-135-35096-3|pages=147–149}}</ref> But as usually understood, the problem of evil is posed in a ] context.<ref name="Stanford" /><ref name="IepEvidential" />
| last = Kekes
| first = John
| authorlink = John Kekes
| title = Facing Evil
| publisher=Princeton UP
| year = 1990
| location = Princeton
| url =
| id =
| isbn = 0-691-07370-8}}</ref> and scientific disciplines such as ].<ref>Timothy Anders, ''The Evolution of Evil'' (2000)</ref><ref>J.D. Duntley and ], "The Evolution of Evil," in {{cite book
| last = Miller
| first = Arthur
| title = The Social Psychology of Good and Evil
| publisher=Guilford
| year = 2004
| location = New York
| pages = 102–133
| url = http://homepage.psy.utexas.edu/homepage/Group/BussLAB/pdffiles/The%20evolution%20of%20evil.pdf
| id =
| isbn = 1-57230-989-X}}</ref> But as usually understood, the "problem of evil" is posed in a ] context.<ref name="Stanford" /><ref name="IepEvidential" />


Responses to the problem of evil have traditionally been in three types: refutations, defenses, and ].
==Detailed arguments==
Numerous versions of the problem of evil have been formulated.<ref name="Stanford" /><ref name="IepEvidential" /><ref name="IepLogical">The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "", James R. Beebe</ref> These versions have included philosophical, theological and Biblical formulations.


The problem of evil is generally formulated in two forms: the '''logical problem of evil''' and the '''evidential problem of evil'''. The logical form of the argument tries to show a logical impossibility in the coexistence of a god and evil,<ref name="Stanford" /><ref name="IepLogical"/> while the evidential form tries to show that given the evil in the world, it is improbable that there is an omnipotent, omniscient, and a wholly good god.<ref name="IepEvidential" /> Concerning the evidential problem, many theodicies have been proposed. One accepted theodicy is to appeal to the strong account of the compensation theodicy. This view holds that the primary benefit of evils, in addition to their compensation in the afterlife, can reject the evidential problem of evil.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Mousavirad |first=Seyyed Jaaber |date=2022-07-02 |title=Theory of Compensation and Problem of Evil; a New Defense |url=https://www.philosophy-of-religion.eu/index.php/ejpr/article/view/3357 |journal=European Journal for Philosophy of Religion |volume=14 |issue=2 |doi=10.24204/ejpr.2022.3357 |issn=1689-8311}}</ref> The problem of evil has been extended to non-human life forms, to include suffering of non-human animal species from ]s and human ] against them.<ref name=inwagenp120/>
===Logical problem of Evil===
The originator of the logical problem of evil has been cited as the Greek philosopher ],<ref>The formulation may have been wrongly attributed to Epicurus by Lactantius, who, from his Christian perspective, regarded Epicurus as an ]. According to Mark Joseph Larrimore, (2001), ''The Problem of Evil'', pp. xix–xxi. Wiley-Blackwell. According to ], it is settled that the argument of theodicy is from an academical source which is not only not epicurean, but even anti-epicurean. Reinhold F. Glei, ''Et invidus et inbecillus. Das angebliche Epikurfragment bei Laktanz, De ira dei 13,20–21'', in: ''Vigiliae Christianae'' 42 (1988), p. 47–58</ref> and this argument may be schematized as follows:


According to scholars{{efn| Attributed to multiple sources: <ref> {{cite book |last1=Meister |first1=Chad |title=Introducing Philosophy of Religion |date=2009 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781134141791 |page=134}}</ref><ref>Howard-Snyder, Daniel; O'Leary-Hawthorne, John (1998). "Transworld Sanctity and Plantinga's Free Will Defense". International Journal for Philosophy of Religion. 44 (1): 1–21. {{doi|10.1023/A:1003210017171}}. {{ISSN|1572-8684}}.</ref><ref>Alston, William P. (1991). "The Inductive Argument from Evil and the Human Cognitive Condition". Philosophical Perspectives. 5: 29–67. {{doi|10.2307/2214090}}. {{ISSN|1758-2245}}. {{JSTOR|2214090}}. {{S2CID|16744068}}.</ref> }}, most philosophers see the logical problem of evil as having been fully rebutted by various defenses.{{Elaborate|reason=defenses need explaining and depending on the type of scholar, could have COE.|date=December 2024}}<ref name="2009Meister">{{cite book |last1=Meister |first1=Chad |title=Introducing Philosophy of Religion |date=2009 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781134141791 |page=134}}</ref><ref>Howard-Snyder, Daniel; O'Leary-Hawthorne, John (1998). "Transworld Sanctity and Plantinga's Free Will Defense". International Journal for Philosophy of Religion. 44 (1): 1–21. {{doi|10.1023/A:1003210017171}}. {{ISSN|1572-8684}}.</ref><ref>Alston, William P. (1991). "The Inductive Argument from Evil and the Human Cognitive Condition". Philosophical Perspectives. 5: 29–67. {{doi|10.2307/2214090}}. {{ISSN|1758-2245}}. {{JSTOR|2214090}}. {{S2CID|16744068}}.</ref>
# If an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent god exists, then evil does not.
# There is evil in the world.
# Therefore, an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent God does not exist.


{{TOC limit|3}}
This argument is of the form ], and is ] if its premises are true, the conclusion follows of necessity. However, it is unclear precisely how the existence of an all-powerful and perfectly good God guarantees the non-existence of evil. Also, it is unclear whether the first premise is true. To show that it is plausible, subsequent versions tend to expand on this premise, such as this modern example:<ref name="IepEvidential" />
==Definitions==
# God exists.
===Evil===
# God is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent.
A broad concept of ] defines it as any and all pain and suffering,<ref name="Todd Calder">{{cite web |last1=Calder |first1=Todd |title=The Concept of Evil |url=https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2020/entries/concept-evil/|website=Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |date=26 November 2013 |publisher=Stanford University |access-date=17 January 2021}}</ref> yet this definition quickly becomes problematic. ] says that a usable definition of evil must be based on the knowledge that: "If something is really evil, it can't be necessary, and if it is really necessary, it can't be evil".<ref name="Marcus G. Singer2004">{{cite journal |last1=Marcus G. Singer |first1=Marcus G. Singer |title=The Concept of Evil |journal=Philosophy |date=April 2004 |volume=79 |issue=308 |pages=185–214 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3751971 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|doi=10.1017/S0031819104000233 |jstor=3751971 |s2cid=146121829 }}</ref>{{rp|186}} According to philosopher John Kemp, evil cannot be correctly understood on "a simple hedonic scale on which pleasure appears as a plus, and pain as a minus".<ref name="John Kemp">{{cite journal |last1=Kemp |first1=John |title=Pain and Evil |journal=Philosophy |date=25 February 2009 |volume=29 |issue=108 |page=13 |doi=10.1017/S0031819100022105 |s2cid=144540963 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/philosophy/article/abs/pain-and-evil/F3FF667D770E68BE6A9A56A345FBB7D6 |access-date=8 January 2021}}</ref><ref name="Todd Calder"/> The ] says ] is essential for survival: "Without pain, the world would be an impossibly dangerous place".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Committee on Advancing Pain Research, Care, and Education |first1=Institute of Medicine (US) |title=Relieving Pain in America: A Blueprint for Transforming Prevention, Care, Education, and Research. |url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK92525/ |website=NCBI Bookshelf |publisher=National Academies Press (US) |access-date=21 February 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Reviews |journal=The Humane Review |date=1901 |volume=2 |issue=5–8 |page=374 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aCUKAAAAIAAJ |publisher=E. Bell}}</ref>
# An omnibenevolent being would want to prevent all evils.
# An omniscient being knows every way in which evils can come into existence, and knows every way in which those evils could be prevented.
While many of the arguments against an omni-God are based on the broadest definition of evil, "most contemporary philosophers interested in the nature of evil are primarily concerned with evil in a narrower sense".<ref name="Calder 2007">{{cite journal |last1=Calder |first1=Todd C. |title=Is the Privation Theory of Evil Dead? |journal=American Philosophical Quarterly |date=2007 |volume=44 |issue=4 |pages=371–381 |jstor=20464387 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/20464387}}</ref> The narrow concept of evil involves moral condemnation, and is applicable only to moral agents capable of making independent decisions, and their actions; it allows for the existence of some pain and suffering without identifying it as evil.<ref name="Eve Garrard">{{cite journal |last1=Garrard |first1=Eve |title=Evil as an Explanatory Concept |journal=The Monist |date=April 2002 |volume=85 |issue=2 |pages=320–336 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/27903775 |publisher=Oxford University Press |doi=10.5840/monist200285219 |jstor=27903775 |format=PDF}}</ref>{{rp|322}} Christianity is based on "the ] value of suffering".<ref name="Taliaferro">{{cite web |last1=Taliaferro |first1=Charles |title=Philosophy of Religion |url=https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/philosophy-religion/#ReliEpis |website=Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |publisher=Sanford University|access-date=7 December 2020|page=3.1}}</ref>
# An omnipotent being has the power to prevent that evil from coming into existence.
# A being who knows every way in which an evil can come into existence, who is able to prevent that evil from coming into existence, and who wants to do so, would prevent the existence of that evil.
# If there exists an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent God, then no evil exists.
# Evil exists (logical contradiction).


Philosopher Eve Garrard suggests that the term evil cannot be used to describe ordinary wrongdoing, because "there is a ''qualitative'' and not merely a ''quantitative'' difference between evil acts and other wrongful ones; evil acts are not just very bad or wrongful acts, but rather ones possessing some specially horrific quality".<ref name="Eve Garrard"/>{{rp|321}} Calder argues that evil must involve the attempt or desire to inflict significant harm on the victim without moral justification.<ref name="Todd Calder"/>
Both of these arguments are understood to be presenting two forms of the ''logical'' problem of evil. They attempt to show that the assumed ]s lead to a ] ] and therefore cannot all be correct. Most philosophical debate has focused on the propositions stating that God cannot exist with, or would want to prevent, all evils (premises 3 and 6), with defenders of theism (for example, Leibniz) arguing that God could very well exist with and allow evil in order to achieve a greater good.


Evil takes on different meanings when seen from the perspective of different belief systems, and while evil can be viewed in religious terms, it can also be understood in natural or secular terms, such as social vice, egoism, criminality, and sociopathology.<ref name="Rorty"/> ] writes that an action is evil if "(1) it causes grievous harm to (2) innocent victims, and it is (3) deliberate, (4) malevolently motivated, and (5) morally unjustifiable".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kekes |first1=John |editor1-last=Bar-Am |editor1-first=Nimrod |editor2-last=Gattei |editor2-first=Stefano |title=Encouraging Openness: Essays for Joseph Agassi on the Occasion of His 90th Birthday |date=2017 |publisher=Springer |isbn=9783319576695 |page=351 |chapter=29, The Secular Problem of Evil}}</ref>
One greater good that has been proposed is that of free will, famously argued for by ] in his ]. The first part of this defense accounts for moral evil as the result of free human action. The second part of this defense argues for the logical possibility of "a mighty nonhuman spirit"<ref>{{cite book |title=God, Freedom, and Evil |last=Plantinga |first=Alvin |year=1974 |publisher=Harper & Row |isbn=0-8028-1731-9 |page=58}}</ref> such as ] who is responsible for so-called "]s", including earthquakes, tidal waves, and virulent diseases. Some philosophers accept that Plantinga successfully solves the logical problem of evil,<ref>{{cite book |title=Introducing Philosophy of Religion |last=Meister |first=Chad |year=2009 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=0-415-40327-8 |page=134}}</ref> as he appears to have shown that God and evil are logically compatible, though others explicitly dissent.<ref>Sobel, J.H. Logic and Theism. Cambridge University Press (2004) pp. 436-7</ref><ref>For example, the compatibility of God's omniscience and free will has been questioned (see the ]).</ref>


===Omni-qualities===
===Evidential problem of evil===
] is "maximal knowledge".<ref name="Wierenga">{{cite web|last=Wierenga|first=Edward|title=Omniscience|publisher=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy|year=2020|editor-last=Zalta|editor-first=Edward N.|url = https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2020/entries/omniscience/|access-date=22 February 2021}}</ref> According to Edward Wierenga, a classics scholar and doctor of philosophy and religion at the University of Massachusetts, ''maximal'' is not unlimited but limited to "God knowing what is knowable".<ref name="Wierenga1989">{{cite book |last1=Wierenga |first1=Edward R. |title=The Nature of God: An Inquiry Into Divine Attributes |date=1989 |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=9780801488504 |pages=202–205}}</ref>{{rp|25}} This is the most widely accepted view of omniscience among scholars of the twenty-first century, and is what ] calls ''freewill-theism''. Within this view, future events that depend upon choices made by individuals with free will are unknowable until they occur.<ref name="Hasker omniscience">{{cite book |last1=Hasker |first1=William |title=Providence, Evil and the Openness of God |date=2004 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9780415329491}}</ref>{{rp|104; 137}}<ref name="Wierenga"/>{{rp|18–20}}
] famous example of ]: "In some distant forest lightning strikes a dead tree, resulting in a forest fire. In the fire a fawn is trapped, horribly burned, and lies in terrible agony for several days before death relieves its suffering."<ref>{{cite journal|last=Rowe|first=William L.|authorlink=William L. Rowe|year=1979|title=The Problem of Evil and Some Varieties of Atheism|journal=American Philosophical Quarterly|volume=16|page=337|ref=harv}}</ref>]]


] is maximal power to bring about events within the limits of possibility, but again ''maximal'' is not unlimited.<ref name="Hoffman and Rosenkrantz">{{cite web |last1=Hoffman |first1=Joshua |last2=Rosenkrantz |first2=Gary |title=Omnipotence |url=https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/omnipotence/ |website=Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |publisher=Stanford University |access-date=22 February 2021}}</ref> According to the philosophers Hoffman and Rosenkrantz: "An omnipotent agent is not required to bring about an impossible state of affairs... maximal power has logical and temporal limitations, including the limitation that an omnipotent agent cannot bring about, i.e., cause, another agent's free decision".<ref name="Hoffman and Rosenkrantz"/>
The ''evidential'' version of the problem of evil (also referred to as the probabilistic or inductive version), seeks to show that the existence of evil, although logically consistent with the existence of God, counts against or lowers the ] of the truth of theism. As an example, a critic of Plantinga's idea of "a mighty nonhuman spirit" causing natural evils may concede that the existence of such a being is not logically impossible but argue that due to lacking scientific evidence for its existence this is very unlikely and thus it is an unconvincing explanation for the presence of natural evils. Both absolute versions and relative versions of the evidential problems of evil are presented below.

] sees God as all-loving. If God is omnibenevolent, he acts according to what is ], but if there is no best available, God attempts, if possible, to bring about states of affairs that are creatable and are optimal within the limitations of physical reality.<ref name="Haji">{{cite journal |last1=Haji |first1=Ishtiyaque |title=A Conundrum Concerning Creation |journal=Sophia |date=2009 |volume=48 |issue=1 |pages=1–14 |doi=10.1007/s11841-008-0062-7 |s2cid=144025073 |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/203892905|id={{ProQuest|203892905}} }}</ref>

===Defenses and theodicies===
Responses to the problem of evil have occasionally been classified as ''defences'' or '']'' although authors disagree on the exact definitions.<ref name="Stanford"/><ref name="IepEvidential"/><ref>{{cite encyclopaedia |first=Ted |last=Honderich |author-link=Ted Honderich |year=2005 |title=theodicy |encyclopedia=The Oxford Companion to Philosophy |isbn=978-0-19-926479-7 |quote=], for example, proposes a theodicy, while ] formulates a defence. The idea of human free will often appears in a both of these strategies, but in different ways.}}</ref> Generally, a defense refers to attempts to address the logical argument of evil that says "it is logically impossible – not just unlikely – that God exists".<ref name="IepEvidential"/> A defense does not require a full explanation of evil, and it need not be true, or even probable; it need only be possible, since possibility invalidates the logic of impossibility.<ref>For more explanation regarding contradictory propositions and possible worlds, see Plantinga's "God, Freedom and Evil" (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans 1974), 24–29.</ref><ref name="IepLogical">The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "", James R. Beebe</ref>

A theodicy, on the other hand, is more ambitious, since it attempts to provide a plausible justification – a morally or philosophically sufficient reason – for the existence of evil. This is intended to weaken the evidential argument which uses the reality of evil to argue that the existence of God is unlikely.<ref name="IepEvidential"/><ref name="Harvey2013p141">{{cite book|first=Peter |last=Harvey |title=An Introduction to Buddhism: Teachings, History and Practices |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=u0sg9LV_rEgC |year=2013|publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-85942-4 |pages=37, 141 }}</ref>

===Secularism===
In philosopher Forrest E. Baird's view, one can have a secular problem of evil whenever humans seek to explain why evil exists and its relationship to the world.<ref name="Mitchell">{{cite web |last1=Mitchell |title=Theodicy: An Overview |url=https://www3.dbu.edu/mitchell/documents/TheodicyOverview_009.pdf |website=dbu.edu/mitchell |publisher=Dallas Baptist University |access-date=14 April 2021}}</ref> He adds that any experience that "calls into question our basic trust in the order and structure of our world" can be seen as evil,<ref name="Mitchell"/> therefore, according to ], humans need explanations of evil "for social structures to stay themselves against chaotic forces".<ref name="Peter L. Berger">{{cite book |last1=Berger |first1=Peter L. |title=The Sacred Canopy: Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion |date=1990 |publisher=Anchor |isbn=978-0385073059 |page=53 |edition=Illustrated}}</ref>

== Formulation ==
{{Further|Existence of God}}
The problem of evil refers to the challenge of reconciling the existence of evil and suffering with our view of the world, especially but not exclusively, with belief in an omnipotent, omnibenevolent, and omniscient God who acts in the world.<ref name="IepEvidential" /><ref name="Harvey2013p141"/><ref name=boydp56>Gregory A. Boyd (2003), ''Is God to Blame?'' (InterVarsity Press), {{ISBN|978-0830823949}}, pp. 55–58</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Peter van Inwagen|title=The Problem of Evil|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iQhUrE8BYFIC|year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-954397-7|pages=6–10, 22, 26–30}}</ref><ref name="Edwards2001">{{cite book|first=Linda |last=Edwards |title=A Brief Guide to Beliefs: Ideas, Theologies, Mysteries, and Movements |url=https://archive.org/details/unset0000unse_s5t3 |url-access=registration |year=2001|publisher=Westminster John Knox Press |isbn=978-0-664-22259-8 |page=}}</ref>

The problem of evil may be described either experientially or theoretically.<ref name="IepEvidential" /> The experiential problem is the difficulty in believing in a concept of a loving God when confronted by evil and suffering in the real world, such as from epidemics, or wars, or murder, or natural disasters where innocent people become victims.<ref>{{cite book|first=John |last=Swinton |title=Raging with Compassion: Pastoral Responses to the Problem of Evil |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sT42mz7G_68C |year=2007|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans |isbn=978-0-8028-2997-9 |pages=33–35, 119, 143 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Susan |last=Neiman |title=Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative History of Philosophy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=28ts5lckpOwC |date=2004 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0691117928 |pages=119–120, 318–322 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Micha de Winter |title=Socialization and Civil Society |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pHRJamJh7XMC |year=2012|publisher=Springer |isbn=978-94-6209-092-7 |pages=69–70 }}</ref> Theoretically, the problem is usually described and studied by religion scholars in two varieties: the logical problem and the evidential problem.<ref name="IepEvidential" />

One of the earliest statements of the problem is found in ]. In the ], the ] (6th or 5th century ]) states that if a God created sentient beings, then due to the pain and suffering they feel, he is likely to be an ].<ref name=":5">Westerhoff, Jan. “Creation in Buddhism” in Oliver, Simon. ''The Oxford Handbook of Creation'', Oxford University Press, Oxford, forthcoming</ref>

===Logical problem of evil<!--'Logical problem of evil' redirects here-->{{anchor|Epicurus}}===
]
The problem of evil possibly originates from the Greek philosopher ] (341–270 BCE).<ref>The formulation may have been wrongly attributed to Epicurus by Lactantius, who, from his Christian perspective, regarded Epicurus as an ]. According to Mark Joseph Larrimore, (2001), ''The Problem of Evil'', pp. xix–xxi. Wiley-Blackwell. According to ], it is settled that the argument of theodicy is from an academical source which is not only not epicurean, but even anti-epicurean. Reinhold F. Glei, ''Et invidus et inbecillus. Das angebliche Epikurfragment bei Laktanz, De ira dei 13, 20–21'', in: ''Vigiliae Christianae'' 42 (1988), pp. 47–58</ref> Hume summarizes Epicurus's version of the problem as follows: "Is willing to prevent evil, but not able? then is he impotent. Is he able, but not willing? then is he malevolent. Is he both able and willing? whence then is evil?"<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hume |first1=David |title=Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4583/4583-h/4583-h.htm |website=Project Gutenberg |access-date=17 June 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Hickson|first=Michael W.|editor1-last=McBrayer|editor1-first=Justin P.|editor2-last=Howard-Snyder|editor2-first=Daniel|date=2014|chapter=A Brief History of Problems of Evil|title=The Blackwell Companion to The Problem of Evil|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J0ScAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT26|location=Hoboken, New Jersey|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|isbn=978-1-118-60797-8|pages=6–7}}</ref>

The logical argument from evil is as follows:
{{blockquote|
P1. If an ], ] and ] god exists, then evil does not.

P2. There is evil in the world.

C1. Therefore, an omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient god does not exist.}}

This argument is of the form {{lang|la|]}}: if its premise (P1) is true, the conclusion (C1) follows of necessity. To show that the first premise is plausible, subsequent versions tend to expand on it, such as this modern example:<ref name="IepEvidential" />

{{blockquote|
P1a. God exists.

P1b. God is omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient.

P1c. An omnipotent being has the power to prevent that evil from coming into existence.

P1d. An omnibenevolent being would want to prevent all evils.

P1e. An omniscient being knows every way in which evils can come into existence, and knows every way in which those evils could be prevented.

P1f. A being who knows every way in which an evil can come into existence, who is able to prevent that evil from coming into existence, and who wants to do so, would prevent the existence of that evil.

P1. If there exists an omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient God, then no evil exists.

P2. Evil exists (logical contradiction).}}

Both of these arguments are understood to be presenting two forms of the 'logical' problem of evil. They attempt to show that the assumed premises lead to a ] ] that cannot all be correct. Most philosophical debate has focused on the suggestion that God would want to prevent all evils and therefore cannot coexist with any evils (premises P1d and P1f), but there are existing responses to every premise (such as ]), with defenders of theism (for example, ] and ]) arguing that God could exist and allow evil if there were good reasons.

If God lacks any one of these qualities{{snd}}omniscience, omnipotence, or omnibenevolence{{snd}}then the logical problem of evil can be resolved. ] and ] are modern positions that limit God's omnipotence or omniscience (as defined in traditional theology) based on free will in others.

===Evidential problem of evil<!--'Logical problem of evil' and 'Evidential argument from evil' redirect here-->===
The evidential problem of evil (also referred to as the probabilistic or inductive version of the problem) seeks to show that the existence of evil, although logically consistent with the existence of God, counts against or lowers the ] of the truth of theism.<ref>For detailed discussion of this issue, see {{cite journal |last1=Benton |first1=Matthew A. |last2=Hawthorne |first2=John |last3=Isaacs |first3=Yoaav |title=Evil and Evidence |journal=Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion |date=2016 |volume=7 |pages=1–31 |doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198757702.003.0001 |isbn=978-0-19-875770-2 |url=https://philpapers.org/archive/BENEAE-5.pdf}}</ref> Both absolute versions and relative versions of the evidential problems of evil are presented below.


A version by ]: A version by ]:
Line 65: Line 94:
# Gratuitous evils exist. # Gratuitous evils exist.
# The hypothesis of indifference, ''i.e.'', that if there are supernatural beings they are indifferent to gratuitous evils, is a better explanation for (1) than theism. # The hypothesis of indifference, ''i.e.'', that if there are supernatural beings they are indifferent to gratuitous evils, is a better explanation for (1) than theism.
# Therefore, evidence prefers that no god, as commonly understood by theists, exists.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Paul |last=Draper |title=Pain and Pleasure: An Evidential Problem for Theists |journal=Noûs |volume=23 |issue=3 |pages=331–350 | year=1989 |doi=10.2307/2215486 |publisher=No&#251;s, Vol. 23, No. 3 |ref=harv |jstor=2215486}}</ref> # Therefore, evidence prefers that no god, as commonly understood by theists, exists.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Paul |last=Draper |title=Pain and Pleasure: An Evidential Problem for Theists |journal=Noûs |volume=23 |issue=3 |pages=331–350 | year=1989 |doi=10.2307/2215486 |jstor=2215486}}</ref>


] is an example of a theistic challenge to the premises in these arguments.
These arguments are probability judgments since they rest on the claim that, even after careful reflection, one can see no good reason for God’s permission of evil. The ] from this claim to the general statement that there exists unnecessary evil is ] in nature and it is this inductive step that sets the evidential argument apart from the logical argument.<ref name="IepEvidential" />


===Problem of evil and animal suffering===
The logical possibility of hidden or unknown reasons for the existence of evil still exist. However, the existence of God is viewed as any large-scale hypothesis or explanatory theory that aims to make sense of some pertinent facts. The extent to which it fails to do so has not been confirmed.<ref name="IepEvidential" /> According to ], one should make as few assumptions as possible. Hidden reasons are assumptions, as is the assumption that all pertinent facts can be observed, or that facts and theories humans have not discerned are indeed hidden. Thus, as per Paul Draper's argument above, the theory that there is an omniscient and omnipotent being who is indifferent requires no hidden reasons in order to explain evil. It is thus a simpler theory than one that also requires hidden reasons regarding evil in order to include omnibenevolence. Similarly, for every hidden argument that completely or partially justifies observed evils it is equally likely that there is a hidden argument that actually makes the observed evils worse than they appear without hidden arguments. As such, from an inductive viewpoint hidden arguments will neutralize one another.<ref name="Stanford" />
{{See also|Wild animal suffering|Predation problem|Evolutionary theodicy}}
]'s example of ]: "In some distant forest lightning strikes a dead tree, resulting in a forest fire. In the fire a fawn is trapped, horribly burned, and lies in terrible agony for several days before death relieves its suffering."<ref name=rowe336>{{cite journal|last=Rowe|first=William L.|author-link=William L. Rowe|year=1979|title=The Problem of Evil and Some Varieties of Atheism|journal=American Philosophical Quarterly|volume=16|pages=336–337}}</ref> Rowe also cites the example of human evil where an innocent child is a victim of violence and thereby suffers.<ref name=rowe336/>]]


The problem of evil has also been extended beyond human suffering, to include suffering of animals from cruelty, disease and evil.<ref name=inwagenp120>{{cite book|author=Peter van Inwagen|title=The Problem of Evil|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iQhUrE8BYFIC |year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-954397-7 |pages=120, 123–126, context: 120–133 }}</ref> One version of this problem includes animal suffering from natural evil, such as the violence and fear faced by animals from predators, natural disasters, over the history of evolution.<ref name=Creeganp44>{{cite book|author=Nicola Hoggard Creegan|title=Animal Suffering and the Problem of Evil|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xB1pAgAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-993185-9 |pages=44–55}}</ref> This is also referred to as the Darwinian problem of evil,<ref>{{cite book|first=Michael |last=Murray |title=Nature Red in Tooth and Claw: Theism and the Problem of Animal Suffering |url=https://archive.org/details/natureredint_murr_2008_000_9051094 |url-access=registration |year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-155327-1 |page=}}</ref><ref name=almeidap193/> after ] who wrote in 1856: "What a book a Devil's chaplain might write on the clumsy, wasteful, blundering low & horridly cruel works of nature!", and in his later autobiography said: "A being so powerful and so full of knowledge as a God who could create the universe, is to our finite minds omnipotent and omniscient, and it revolts our understanding to suppose that his benevolence is not unbounded, for what advantage can there be in the sufferings of millions of the lower animals throughout almost endless time? This very old argument from the existence of suffering against the existence of an intelligent first cause seems to me a strong one".<ref name="Murray2008">{{cite book|first=Michael |last=Murray |title=Nature Red in Tooth and Claw: Theism and the Problem of Animal Suffering |url=https://archive.org/details/natureredint_murr_2008_000_9051094 |url-access=registration |year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-155327-1 |page=}}, cites letter to J. D. Hooker (Darwin Correspondence Project, "Letter no. 1924," accessed on 9 May 2021, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/DCP-LETT-1924.xml)</ref><ref name="CD bio90">{{cite book |last= Darwin |first= Charles |year = 1958 |editor-last = Barlow |editor-first = Nora |editor-link = Nora Barlow |title = The Autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809–1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his granddaughter Nora Barlow |url = http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?pageseq=1&itemID=F1497&viewtype=text |location= London |publisher = Collins |page= |access-date=2021-05-09|website=darwin-online.org.uk}}</ref>
Author and researcher ] offers what he considers to be a particularly strong problem of evil. Paul introduces his own estimates that at least 100 billion people have been born throughout human history (starting roughly 50 000 years ago, when ]—humans—first appeared).<ref>Haub, C. 1995/2004. “How Many People Have Ever Lived On Earth?” Population Today, http://www.prb.org/Articles/2002/HowManyPeopleHaveEverLivedonEarth.aspx</ref> He then performed what he calls "simple" calculations to estimate the historical death rate of children throughout this time. He found that the historical death rate was over 50%, and that the deaths of these children were mostly due to diseases (like ]).


The second version of the problem of evil applied to animals, and avoidable suffering experienced by them, is one caused by some human beings, such as from animal cruelty or when they are shot or slaughtered. This version of the problem of evil has been used by scholars including ] to counter the responses and defenses to the problem of evil such as suffering being a means to perfect the morals and greater good because animals are innocent, helpless, amoral but sentient victims.<ref name=inwagenp120/><ref>{{cite book|first=Diogenes |last=Allen |editor=Marilyn McCord Adams and Robert Merrihew Adams|title=The Problem of Evil |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nqNwUSj7U7QC |year=1990|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-824866-8 |pages=204–206 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=William L.|last=Rowe|title=William L. Rowe on Philosophy of Religion: Selected Writings|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M4GdWhLtZzAC&pg=PA61 |year=2007|publisher=Ashgate |isbn=978-0-7546-5558-9 |pages=61–64 (the fawn's suffering example) }}</ref> Scholar Michael Almeida said this was "perhaps the most serious and difficult" version of the problem of evil.<ref name=almeidap193>{{cite book|first=Michael J.|last=Almeida|title=Freedom, God, and Worlds|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=chSSBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA193|year=2012|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-964002-7 |pages=193–194 }}</ref> The problem of evil in the context of animal suffering, states Almeida, can be stated as:<ref>{{cite book|first=Michael J.|last=Almeida|title=Freedom, God, and Worlds|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=chSSBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA193|year=2012|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-964002-7 |pages=194–195, for the complete context and alternate formulations see pp. 194–217 }}</ref>{{Refn|group=note|Nicola Creegan has presented the logical and evidential versions of the problem of evil when applied to animal suffering.<ref name=Creeganp44/>}}
Paul thus sees it as a problem of evil, because this means that within the bounds of his estimates, that throughout human history, over 50 billion people died naturally before they were old enough to give mature consent. He adds that as many as 300 billion humans may never have reached birth, instead dying naturally but prenatally (the prenatal death rate being about 3/4 historically). Paul says that these figures could have implications for calculating the population of a heaven (which could include the aforementioned 50 billion children, 50 billion adults, and roughly 300 billion fetuses—excluding any living today).<ref>Paul, G.S. (2009) "Theodicy’s Problem: A Statistical Look at the Holocaust of the Children and the Implications of Natural Evil For the Free Will and Best of All Possible Worlds Hypotheses" Philosophy & Theology 19:125–149</ref><ref>Greg Paul and the Problem of Evil, on the podcast and TV show "]", http://www.atheist-experience.com/</ref>


# God is omnipotent, omniscient and wholly good.
A common response to instances of the evidential problem is that there are plausible (and not hidden) justifications for God’s permission of evil. These ] are discussed below.
# The evil of extensive animal suffering exists.
# Necessarily, God can actualize an evolutionary perfect world.
# Necessarily, God can actualize an evolutionary perfect world only if God does actualize an evolutionary perfect world.
# Necessarily, God actualized an evolutionary perfect world.
# If #1 is true then either #2 or #5 is true, but not both. This is a contradiction, so #1 is not true.


==Secular responses==
=== Related arguments ===
While the problem of evil is usually considered to be a theistic one, ] says there is a secular problem of evil that exists even if one gives up belief in a deity; that is, the problem of how it is possible to reconcile "the pain and suffering human beings inflict upon one another".<ref name="Peter Kivy">{{cite journal |last1=Kivy |first1=Peter |title=Melville's "Billy" and the Secular Problem of Evil: The Worm in the Bud |journal=The Monist |date=1980 |volume=63 |issue=4 |page=481 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/27902666 |publisher=Oxford University Press|doi=10.5840/monist198063429 |jstor=27902666 }}</ref> Kivy writes that all but the most extreme moral skeptics agree that humans have a duty to not knowingly harm others. This leads to the secular problem of evil when one person injures another through "unmotivated malice" with no apparent rational explanation or justifiable self-interest.<ref name="Peter Kivy"/>{{rp|486, 491}}
Doctrines of ], particularly those involving ] suffering, pose a particularly strong form of the problem of evil (see ]). If the problem of unbelief, incorrect beliefs, or poor design are considered evils, then the ], the ], and the ] may be seen as particular instances of the argument that the co-existence of evil with such a deity is unlikely or impossible.


There are two main reasons used to explain evil, but according to Kivy, neither are fully satisfactory.<ref name="Peter Kivy"/> The first explanation is ] – that everything humans do is from self-interest. Bishop Butler has countered this asserting pluralism: human beings are motivated by self-interest, but they are also motivated by particulars – that is particular objects, goals or desires – that may or may not involve self-interest but are motives in and of themselves and may, occasionally, include genuine benevolence.<ref name="Peter Kivy"/>{{rp|481–482}} For the egoist, "man's inhumanity to man" is "not explainable in rational terms", for if humans can be ruthless for ruthlessness' sake, then egoism is not the only human motive.<ref name="Peter Kivy"/>{{rp|484}} Pluralists do not fare better simply by recognizing three motives: injuring another for one of those motives could be interpreted as rational, but hurting for the sake of hurting, is as irrational to the pluralist as the egoist.<ref name="Peter Kivy"/>{{rp|485}}
== Responses, defences and theodicies ==
Responses to the problem of evil have occasionally been classified as ''defences'' or ''theodicies;'' however, authors disagree on the exact definitions.<ref name="Stanford"/><ref name="IepEvidential"/><ref>{{cite encyclopaedia |first=Ted |last=Honderich |authorlink=Ted Honderich |year=2005 |title=theodicy |encyclopedia=The Oxford Companion to Philosophy |isbn=0-19-926479-1 |quote=], for example, proposes a theodicy, while ] formulates a defence. The idea of human free will often appears in a both of these strategies, but in different ways.}}</ref> Generally, a ''defense'' against the problem of evil may refer to attempts to defuse the logical problem of evil by showing that there is no logical incompatibility between the existence of evil and the existence of God. This task does not require the identification of a plausible explanation of evil, and is successful if the explanation provided shows that the existence of God and the existence of evil are logically compatible. It need not even be true, since a false though coherent explanation would be sufficient to show logical compatibility.<ref>For more explanation regarding contradictory propositions and possible worlds, see Plantinga's "God, Freedom and Evil" (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans 1974), 24–29.</ref>


] offers a few examples of secular responses to the problem of evil:<ref name="Rorty">Rorty, Amélie Oksenberg. ''Introduction. The Many Faces of Evil: Historical Perspectives''. Ed. Amélie Oksenberg Rorty. London: Routledge, 2001. xi–xviii.{{ISBN?}}</ref>
A '']'',<ref>Coined by ] from ] θεός (theós), "god" and δίκη (díkē), "justice", may refer to the project of "justifying God" – showing that God's existence is compatible with the existence of evil.</ref> on the other hand, is more ambitious, since it attempts to provide a plausible justification—a morally or philosophically sufficient reason—for the existence of evil and thereby rebut the "evidential" argument from evil.<ref name="IepEvidential" /> ] maintains that it does not make sense to assume there are greater goods that justify the evil's presence in the world unless we know what they are—without knowledge of what the greater goods could be, one cannot have a successful theodicy.<ref name=swinburne05>{{cite encyclopaedia |first=Richard |last=Swinburne |authorlink=Richard Swinburne |year=2005 |title=evil, the problem of |editor=Ted Honderich |encyclopedia=The Oxford Companion to Philosophy |isbn=0-19-926479-1 |editor-link=Ted Honderich}}</ref> Thus, some authors see arguments appealing to ]s or the ] as indeed logically possible, but not very ''plausible'' given our knowledge about the world, and so see those arguments as providing defences but not good theodicies.<ref name="IepEvidential" />


===Evil as necessary===
=== Denial of absolute omniscience, omnipotence, omnibenevolence ===
According to ] and ], while character traits such as wanton cruelty, partiality and egoism are an innate part of the human condition, these vices serve the "common good" of the social process.<ref name="Rorty"/>{{rp|xiii}} For Montaigne, the idea of evil is relative to the limited knowledge of human beings, not to the world itself or to God. He adopts what philosophers ] and ] refer to as a "neo-Stoic view of an orderly world" where everything is in its place.<ref name="Oppy and Trakakis">{{cite book |last1=Oppy |first1=Graham |last2=Trakakis |first2=N. N. |title=Early Modern Philosophy of Religion: The History of Western Philosophy of Religion |date=2014 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781317546450 |page=69}}</ref>
If God lacks any one of these qualities, the existence of evil is explicable, and so the problem of evil would be treated instead under the heading of some alternate formulation or doctrine of theology.


This secular version of the early coherentist response to the problem of evil, (coherentism asserts that acceptable belief must be part of a coherent system), can be found, according to Rorty, in the writings of ] and ]. Mandeville says that when vices like greed and envy are suitably regulated within the social sphere, they are what "spark the energy and productivity that make progressive civilization possible". Rorty asserts that the guiding motto of both religious and secular coherentists is: 'Look for the benefits gained by harm and you will find they outweigh the damage'."<ref name="Rorty"/>{{rp|xv}}
In ] the individual deities are usually not omnipotent or omnibenevolent as the powers which they share are distributed among the diverse gods; however, if one of the deities has these properties the problem of evil applies. Belief systems where several deities are omnipotent would lead to logical contradictions and conflict.


Economic theorist ] stated in a 1798 essay on the question of population over-crowding, its impact on food availability, and food's impact on population through famine and death, that it was: "Necessity, that imperious, all pervading law of nature, restrains them within the prescribed bounds{{nbsp}} and man cannot by any means of reason escape from it".<ref name="Malthus T.R.">Malthus T.R. 1798. "An essay on the principle of population". Oxford World's Classics reprint.</ref>{{rp|2}} He adds: "Nature will not, indeed cannot be defeated in her purposes."<ref name="Malthus T.R."/>{{rp|412}} According to Malthus, nature and the God of nature, cannot be seen as evil in this natural and necessary process.<ref>Thomas Malthus (1798), , Oxford Classics, p. 123</ref>
] belief systems (a kind of ]) explain the problem of evil from the existence of two rival great, but not omnipotent, deities that work in polar opposition to each other. Examples of such belief systems include ], ], ], and possibly ]. The ] in Islam and in Christianity is not seen as equal in power to God who is omnipotent. Thus the Devil could only exist if so allowed by God. The Devil, if so limited in power, can therefore by himself not explain the problem of evil without recourse to theism of some alternate version of theology.


===Evil as the absence of good===
] and ] are other positions that limit God's omnipotence and/or omniscience (as defined in traditional ]).
{{Main|Absence of good}}
] says that, to ], evil resulted from the human failure to pay sufficient attention to finding and doing good: evil is an absence of good where good should be. More says Plato directed his entire educational program against the "innate indolence of the will" and the neglect of a search for ethical motives "which are the true springs of our life".<ref name="Paul Elmer More">{{cite book |last1=More |first1=Paul Elmer |title=The Religion of Plato |date=1921 |publisher=Princeton University Press |edition=2, reprint}}</ref>{{rp|256–257}} Plato asserted that it is the innate laziness, ignorance and lack of attention to pursuing good that, in the beginning, leads humans to fall into "the first lie, of the soul" that then often leads to self-indulgence and evil.<ref name="Paul Elmer More"/>{{rp|259}} According to Joseph Kelly,<ref name="Kelly2002p42"/> ], a neo-Platonist in the 2nd-century, adopted Plato's view of evil.<ref name="Paul Elmer More"/>{{rp|256; 294; 317}} The fourth-century theologian ] also adopted Plato's view. In his ''Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Love'', Augustine maintained that evil exists as an "absence of the good".<ref name=jeffrey49/>


] emphasized the existence of evil and its negation of the good. Therefore, according to Mesgari Akbar and Akbari Mohsen, he was a pessimist.<ref name="Akbar and Mohsen">{{cite journal |last1=Akbar |first1=Mesgari Ahmad Ali |last2=Mohsen |first2=Akbari |title=Schopenhauer: Pessimism, and the Positive Nature of Evil |journal=Knowledge (Journal of Human Sciences) |date=2013 |volume=67 |issue=1 |url=https://www.sid.ir/en/Journal/ViewPaper.aspx?ID=408681}}</ref> He defined the "good" as coordination between an individual object and a definite effort of the will, and he defined evil as the absence of such coordination.<ref name="Akbar and Mohsen"/>
==== Denial of omnibenevolence ====
] is the belief that God is not wholly good. ] and ] who are dystheistic may provide alternate versions for describing the disposition of evil.


Arguably, ]'s presentation of the ] as an exemplar of "the banality of evil"--consisting of a lack of empathic imagination, coupled with thoughtless conformity--is a variation on Augustine's theodicy.
==="Greater good" responses ===
The ]es, where evil persists in the presence of an all powerful God, raise questions as to the nature of God's omnipotence. Although that is from excluding the idea of how an interference would negate and subjugate the concept of free will, or in other words caused a totalitarian system that creates a lack of freedom. Some solutions propose that omnipotence does not require the ability to actualize the logically impossible. "Greater good" responses to the problem make use of this insight by arguing for existence of goods of great value which God cannot actualize without also permitting evil, and thus that there are evils he cannot be expected to prevent despite being omnipotent. Among the most popular versions of the "greater good" response are appeals to the apologetics of free will.


====Free will==== ===Deny problem exists===
], the Greek Peripatetic philosopher and author of ''Characters'',<ref name="Sonia Pertsinidis">{{cite book |last1=Pertsinidis |first1=Sonia |title=Theophrastus' Characters: A New Introduction |date=2018 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781351997812}}</ref> a work that explores the moral weaknesses and strengths of 30 personality types in the Greece of his day, thought that the nature of 'being' comes from, and consists of, contraries, such as eternal and perishable, order and chaos, good and evil; the role of evil is thereby limited, he said, since it is only a part of the whole which is overall, good.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Theophrastus |editor1-last=van Raalte |editor1-first=M. |title=Theophrastus Metaphysics: With Introduction, Translation and Commentary |date=2018 |publisher=Brill |isbn=9789004329218 |page=31}}</ref> According to Theophrastus, a world focused on virtue and vice was a naturalistic social world where the overall goodness of the universe as a whole included, of necessity, both good and evil, rendering the problem of evil non-existent.<ref name="Rorty"/>{{rp|xv}}
Use of the term “free will” creates confusion unless its definition is stated.<ref>Randy Alcorn, ''If God Is Good: Faith in the Midst of Suffering and Evil'' (Multnomah Books, 2009), 243.</ref> In order to reduce confusion, ] found that a delineation of three kinds of freedom is necessary for clarity on the subject. (“Free will” and “freedom” are often used as synonyms.<ref>Ted Honderich, “Determinism and Freedom Philosophy – Its Terminology,” http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uctytho/dfwTerminology.html (accessed November 7, 2009).</ref>) These three kinds of freedom follow:<ref>Mortimer J. Adler, ''The Idea of Freedom: A Dialectical Examination of the Idea of Freedom'', Vol 1 (Doubleday, 1958).</ref>


] traced what he asserted as the psychological origins of virtue but not the vices. Rorty says: "He dispels the superstitious remnants of a ] battle: the forces of good and evil warring in the will"; concluding instead that human beings project their own subjective disapproval onto events and actions.<ref name="Rorty"/>{{rp|282}}
# “Circumstantial freedom” is "freedom from coercion or restraint" that prevents acting as one wills.<ref>Mortimer J. Adler, ''The Idea of Freedom: A Dialectical Examination of the Idea of Freedom'', Vol 1 (Doubleday, 1958), 127.</ref>
# “Natural freedom” is freedom to will what one desires. This natural free will is inherent in all people.<ref>Mortimer J. Adler, ''The Idea of Freedom: A Dialectical Examination of the Idea of Freedom'', Vol 1 (Doubleday, 1958), 149.</ref>
# “Acquired freedom” is freedom “to live as ought.” To possess acquired free will requires a change by which a person acquires a desire to live a life marked by qualities such as goodness and wisdom.<ref>Mortimer J. Adler, ''The Idea of Freedom: A Dialectical Examination of the Idea of Freedom'', Vol 1 (Doubleday, 1958), 135.</ref>


====Evil as illusory====
For ], ] and exponent of ],<ref>http://reknew.org/2007/12/is-free-will-compatible-with-predestination/. “Libertarian freedom is not compatible with predestination, it is compatible with Scripture.” Accessed July 14, 2014.</ref> the ] response asserts that the existence of free beings is something of very high value, because with free will comes the ability to make morally significant choices (which include the expression of love and affection). Boyd also maintains that God does not plan or will evil in people's lives, but that evil is a result of a combination of free choices and the interconnectedness and complexity of life in a sinful and fallen world. With free will also comes the potential for ethical abuse, as when individuals fail to act morally. But the evil results created by such abuse of free will is easily outweighed by the great value of free will and the good that comes of it, and so God is justified in creating a world which offers free will existence, and with it the potential for evil. A world with free beings and no evil would be still better. However, this would require the cooperation of free beings with God, as it would be logically inconsistent for God to prevent abuses of freedom without thereby curtailing that freedom.<ref>Gregory A. Boyd, ''Is God to Blame?'' (InterVarsity Press, 2003) 57-58, 76, 96.</ref>
A modern version of this view is found in ] which asserts that evils such as suffering and disease only {{em|appear}} to be real but, in truth, are illusions.<ref name="Millard J. Erickson 2007, page 445-446">Millard J. Erickson, Christian Theology, Second Edition, Baker Academic, 2007, pp. 445–446.</ref> The theologians of Christian Science, states Stephen Gottschalk, posit that the Spirit is of infinite might; mortal human beings fail to grasp this and focus instead on evil and suffering that have no real existence as "a power, person or principle opposed to God".<ref name= Gottschalkp65>{{cite book|first=Stephen |last=Gottschalk |title=Christian Science |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r-FYQv75w7kC |year=1978|publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-03718-2|pages=65–69}}</ref>


The illusion theodicy has been critiqued for denying the reality of crimes, wars, terror, sickness, injury, death, suffering and pain to the victim.<ref name= Gottschalkp65/> Further, adds Millard Erickson, the illusion argument merely shifts the problem to a new problem, as to why God would create this "illusion" of crimes, wars, terror, sickness, injury, death, suffering and pain; and why God does not stop this "illusion".<ref name="Millard J. Erickson 1998 446–47">{{cite book|first=Millard J.|last=Erickson|title=Christian Theology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8Z5zBQAAQBAJ |year=1998|publisher=Baker Academic|isbn=978-0-8010-2182-4 |pages=446–447 }}</ref>
However, critics of the free will response have questioned whether it accounts for the degree of evil seen in this world. One point in this regard is that while the value of free will may be thought sufficient to counterbalance minor evils, it is less obvious that it outweighs the negative attributes of evils such as rape and murder. Particularly egregious cases known as horrendous evils, which " ] reason to doubt whether the participant’s life could (given their inclusion in it) be a great good to him/her on the whole," have been the focus of recent work in the problem of evil.<ref>], ''Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God'' (Cornell University, 2000), 203.</ref> Another point is that those actions of free beings which bring about evil very often diminish the freedom of those who suffer the evil; for example the murder of a young child may prevent the child from ever exercising their free will. In such a case the freedom of an innocent child is pitted against the freedom of the evil-doer, it is not clear why God would remain unresponsive and passive.<ref>], ''Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God'' (Melbourne University Press, 1999), 26.</ref>


===Moral rationalism===
A second criticism is that the potential for evil inherent in free will may be limited by means which do not impinge on that free will. God could accomplish this by making moral actions especially pleasurable, so that they would be irresistible to us; he could also punish immoral actions immediately, and make it obvious that moral rectitude is in our self-interest; or he could allow bad moral decisions to be made, but intervene to prevent the harmful consequences from actually happening. A reply is that such a "toy world" would mean that free will has less or no real value.<ref>C. S. Lewis writes: "We can, perhaps, conceive of a world in which God corrected the results of this abuse of free will by His creatures at every moment: so that a wooden beam became soft as grass when it was used as a weapon, and the air refused to obey me if I attempted to set up in it the sound waves that carry lies or insults. But such a world would be one in which wrong actions were impossible, and in which, therefore, freedom of the will would be void; nay, if the principle were carried out to its logical conclusion, evil thoughts would be impossible, for the cerebral matter which we use in thinking would refuse its task when we attempted to frame them." C.S. Lewis '']'' (HarperCollins, 1996) pp. 24–25</ref> Critics may respond that this view seems to imply it would be similarly wrong for humans to try to reduce suffering in these ways, a position which few would advocate.<ref>''The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy'', s.v. "The Problem of Evil," Michael Tooley at http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/evil/.</ref> The debate depends on the definitions of ] and ], which are ], as well as their relation to one another. See also ], ], and ]. In general terms, compatibilism and incompatibilism refer to whether free-will in individuals is in conflict with a God who may or may not have knowledge of the outcome of the choices which individuals make based on this free-will before the choices are made.
"In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries rationalism about morality was repeatedly used to reject strong divine command theories of ethics".<ref name="J. B. Schneewind">{{cite journal |last1=Schneewind |first1=J. B. |title=Hume and the Religious Significance of Moral Rationalism |journal=Hume Studies |date=2000 |volume=26 |issue=2 |pages=211–223 |doi=10.1353/hms.2000.a385723 |url=https://philpapers.org/rec/SCHHAT-11}}</ref> Such ] asserts that morality is based on reason.<ref name="Shaun Nichols">{{cite journal |last1=Nichols |first1=Shaun |title=How Psychopaths Threaten Moral Rationalism Is it Irrational to Be Amoral? |journal=The Monist |date=2002 |volume=85 |issue=2 |doi=10.5840/monist200285210 |url=https://www.pdcnet.org/monist/content/monist_2002_0085_0002_0285_0303}}</ref> Rorty refers to ] as an example of a "pious rationalist".<ref name="Rorty"/>{{rp|xv}} According to Shaun Nichols, "The Kantian approach to moral philosophy is to try to show that ethics is based on practical reason".<ref name="Shaun Nichols"/> The problem of evil then becomes, "how possible for a rational being of good will to be immoral".<ref name="Rorty"/>{{rp|xiii}}


Kant wrote an essay on theodicy criticizing it for attempting too much without recognizing the limits of human reason.<ref name=dembski11> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120916165136/http://www.designinference.com/documents/2003.04.CTNS_theodicy.pdf |date=16 September 2012 }}, William Dembski (2003), Baylor University, pp. 11, 12</ref> Kant did not think he had exhausted all possible theodicies, but did assert that any successful one must be based on nature rather than philosophy.<ref>See Kant's essay, "Concerning the Possibility of a Theodicy and the Failure of All Previous Philosophical Attempts in the Field" (1791). p. 291. Stephen Palmquist explains why Kant refuses to solve the problem of evil in "Faith in the Face of Evil", Appendix VI of (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000).</ref> While a successful philosophical theodicy had not been achieved in his time, added Kant, he asserted there was no basis for a successful anti-theodicy either.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120916165136/http://www.designinference.com/documents/2003.04.CTNS_theodicy.pdf |date=16 September 2012 }}, William Dembski (2003), Baylor University, p. 12</ref>
A third reply is that though the free will defence has the potential to explain ], it fails to address ]. By definition, moral evil results from human action, but natural evil results from natural processes that cause natural disasters such as volcanic eruptions or earthquakes.<ref>”The Two Types of Evil,” at http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/rs/god/chgoodandevilrev1.shtml. Accessed July 10, 2014.</ref> Advocates of the free will response to evil propose various explanations of natural evils. ], following ],<ref>Alvin Plantinga, ''God, Freedom, and Evil'' (Eerdmans, 1989), 58.</ref> and others have argued that natural evils are caused by the free choices of supernatural beings such as ]s.<ref>Bradley Hanson, ''Introduction to Christian Theology'' (Fortress, 1997), 99.</ref> Others have argued
:• that natural evils are the result of the ], which corrupted the perfect world created by God<ref>Linda Edwards, ''A Brief Guide'' (Westminster John Knox, 2001), 62.</ref> or
:• that ] which are prerequisite for the existence of intelligent free beings<ref>] is one advocate of the view that the current natural laws are necessary for free will {{cite book | last = Polkinghorne | first = John | authorlink = John Polkinghorne | title = Belief in God in an Age of Science | publisher=Yale Nota Bene | year = 2003 | location = New Haven, CT | page = 14 | isbn = 978-0-300-09949-2 }} and also See esp. ch. 5 of his ''Science and Providence''. ISBN 978-0-87773-490-1</ref> or
:• that natural evils provide us with a knowledge of evil which makes our free choices more significant than they would otherwise be, and so our free will more valuable<ref>] in "Is There a God?" writes that "the operation of natural laws producing evils gives humans knowledge (if they choose to seek it) of how to bring about such evils themselves. Observing you can catch some disease by the operation of natural processes gives me the power either to use those processes to give that disease to other people, or through negligence to allow others to catch it, or to take measures to prevent others from catching the disease." In this way, "it increases the range of significant choice... The actions which natural evil makes possible are ones which allow us to perform at our best and interact with our fellows at the deepest level" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996) 108–109.</ref> or
:• that natural evils are a mechanism of divine punishment for moral evils that humans have committed, and so the natural evil is justified.<ref>Bradley Hanson, ''Introduction to Christian Theology'' (Fortress, 1997), 100.</ref> (See also ], ], and ].)


===Evil God challenge===
Advocates of the free will response can also point to the fact that “the line between moral and natural evil is not always clear.”<ref>Bradley Hanson, ''Introduction to Christian Theology'' (Fortress, 1997), 98.</ref> Natural evils are often caused or exacerbated by humans in their exercise of free will.<ref>Dennis S. Mileti, ''Disasters by Design: a Reassessment of Natural Hazards in the United States'' (Joseph Henry Press, 1999).</ref>
One resolution to the problem of evil is that God is not good. The ] thought experiment explores whether an evil God is as likely to exist as a good God. ] is the belief that God is not wholly good. ] is the belief in an evil god.
:• “Deforestation and floodplain development” turn high rainfall into “devastating floods and mudslides."<ref>“Natural Disasters Made Worse by Human Activity” (May 20, 2008), http://www.expatica.com/fr/news/local_news/Natural-disasters-made-worse-by-human-activity-_43194.html#. Accessed December 2, 2009.</ref>
:• Earthquake casualties often result from poor construction.<ref>“UN Says Poor Construction to Blame for Earthquake Deaths, May 19, 2008,” http://www.expatica.com/fr/news/local_news/UN-says-poor-construction-to-blame-for-earthquake-deaths-_43155.html (access December 2, 2009).</ref>
:• Dusty conditions in the American West that cause health problems are the “result of human activity and not part of the natural system."<ref>“Dust in West up 500 Percent in Past 2 Centuries, says CU-Boulder Study,” http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2008-02/uoca-diw022208.php (accessed December 2, 2009).</ref>


] has stated:<blockquote>The anti-God that I take seriously is the malicious omnipotent omniscient being, who, it is said, creates so that creatures will suffer, because of the joy this suffering gives It. This may be contrasted with a different idea of anti-God, that of an evil being that seeks to destroy things of value out of hatred or envy. An omnipotent, omniscient being would not be envious. Moreover, destructive hatred cannot motivate creation. For these two reasons I find that rather implausible. My case holds, however, against that sort of anti-God as well as the malicious one. The variety of anti-Gods alerts us to the problem of positing any character to God, whether benign, indifferent, or malicious. There are many such character traits we could hypothesize. Why not a God who creates as a jest? Or a God who loves drama? Or a God who, adapting Haldane's quip, is fond of beetles? Or, more seriously, a God who just loves creating regardless of the joy or suffering of creatures?<ref>Forrest, P. (2012). Replying to the anti-god challenge: A god without moral character acts well. Religious Studies, 48(1), 35–43.</ref></blockquote>
Finally, because the free will response assumes a ] account of free will, the debate over its adequacy naturally widens into a debate concerning the nature and existence of free will. ] deny that a being who is determined to act morally lacks free will, and so also that God cannot ensure the moral behavior of the free beings he creates. ] deny the existence of free will, and therefore they deny that the existence of free will justifies the evil in our world. There is also debate regarding the compatibility of moral free will (to select good or evil action) with the absence of evil from heaven,<ref>Oppy, Graham. ''Arguing about Gods'', pp. 314–39. Cambridge University Press, 2006. ISBN 0521863864</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.svri.org/evil.pdf#page=72 |title=Evil, Freedom and the Heaven Dilemma | author=Simon Cushing|year=2010 | work=Challenging Evil: Time, Society and Changing Concepts of the Meaning of Evil | publisher=Inter-Disciplinary Press |deadurl=no |accessdate=10 April 2014}}</ref> with God's omniscience (see the ]), and with his omnibenevolence.<ref name="IepLogical" />


====Catholic Response====
There is also the take that all of the possibilities already exist. It is not a question of whether it is good or bad, for morality can be argued as subjective, but that it is a matter of what choice does one decide to take. That is to say that like how one could choose to think about hitting someone, but at the same time it doesn't mean that you have to do it. Similarly all the causal effects or results that are seen in reality doesn't have to happen, it happened in the past because they chose an action that caused that event. Like how a painter doesn't have to paint the "evil stuff" within his head to his painting, and instead choose to paint "good stuff" and things that won't hurt other people. Reality can be taken like a ], in which all possibilities of the different types of attack, defense, evade, or multiple sets of combos already exist, and the video game (God) already knows all the possible choices, it is only matter of which "move" will the player (Human) select to appear in the screen (reality). Mistakes therefore exist to learn from it. Free will therefore exist for the player to be able to interact in the "video game world", and free will in this discussion is defined as the existence of being able to freely do what they want to do. If they can't do what they want to do then free will doesn't exit. Like how you can not have a coin that only has the head without the tails. By wanting the head of the coin, one must also have the tails. Because without the other then there is no ability to distinguish itself from the other, and what the other is from itself. One cannot know what is up without down, left without right existing. So, it is only a matter of which move does the player want to select to appear on the screen. What imagination does the painter want to paint in the painting.{{Citation needed|date=July 2014}}
The ] believes good things include power and knowledge, and that only the misuse of power and knowledge is evil. Consequently, the church believes God could not be evil or become evil if he is omnipotent and omniscient, since these qualities spring from omnibenevolence. As the ] puts it:


{{block quote|For by acknowledging God to be omnipotent, we also of necessity acknowledge Him to be omniscient, and to hold all things in subjection to His supreme authority and dominion. When we do not doubt that He is omnipotent, we must be also convinced of everything else regarding Him, the absence of which would render His omnipotence altogether unintelligible. Besides, nothing tends more to confirm our faith and animate our hope than a deep conviction that all things are possible to God; for whatever may be afterwards proposed as an object of faith, however great, however wonderful, however raised above the natural order, is easily and without hesitation believed, once the mind has grasped the knowledge of the omnipotence of God. Nay more, the greater the truths which the divine oracles announce, the more willingly does the mind deem them worthy of belief. And should we expect any favour from heaven, we are not discouraged by the greatness of the desired benefit, but are cheered and confirmed by frequently considering that there is nothing which an omnipotent God cannot effect.<ref></ref>}}
====Soul-making or Irenaean theodicy====
{{main|Irenaean theodicy}}


===Disavowal of theodicy===
Distinctive of the soul-making theodicy is the claim that evil and ] are necessary for spiritual growth. Theology consistent with this type of theodicy was developed by the second-century ], ], and its most recent advocate has been the influential ], ]. A perceived inadequacy with the theodicy is that many evils do not seem to promote such growth, and can be positively destructive of the human spirit. Hick acknowledges that this process often fails in our world.<ref>John Hick, ''Evil and the God of Love '', (Palgrave Macmillan, 2nd edition 1977, 2010 reissue), 325, 336.</ref> A second issue concerns the distribution of evils suffered: were it true that God permitted evil in order to facilitate spiritual growth, then we would expect evil to disproportionately befall those in poor spiritual health. This does not seem to be the case, as the decadent enjoy lives of luxury which insulate them from evil, whereas many of the pious are poor, and are well acquainted with worldly evils.<ref>The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "The Problem of Evil", James R. Beebe</ref> A third problem attending this theodicy is that the qualities developed through experience with evil seem to be useful precisely because they are useful in overcoming evil. But if there were no evil, then there would seem to be no value in such qualities, and consequently no need for God to permit evil in the first place. Against this it may be asserted that the qualities developed are intrinsically valuable, but this view would need further justification.
This position argues from a number of different directions that the theodicy project is objectionable. Toby Betenson writes that the central theme of all anti-theodicies is that: "Theodicies mediate a praxis that sanctions evil".<ref name="Betenson 2016">{{cite journal|last=Betenson|first=Toby|title=Anti-Theodicy|journal=Philosophy Compass| volume=11|issue=1| year=2016|pages=56–65| doi=10.1111/phc3.12289 |publisher=Wylie Online Library|url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/phc3.12289}}</ref> A theodicy may harmonize God with the existence of evil, but it can be said that it does so at the cost of nullifying morality. Most theodicies assume that whatever evil there is exists for the sake of some greater good. However, if that is so, then it appears humans have no duty to prevent it, for in preventing evil they would also prevent the greater good for which the evil is required. Even worse, it seems that any action can be rationalized, for if one succeeds in performing an evil act, then God has permitted it, and so it must be for the greater good. From this line of thought one may conclude that, as these conclusions violate humanity's basic moral intuitions, no greater good theodicy is true, and God does not exist. Alternatively, one may point out that greater good theodicies lead humanity to see every conceivable state of affairs as compatible with the existence of God, and in that case the notion of God's goodness is rendered meaningless.<ref>Dittman, Volker and Tremblay, François {{cite web|title=The Immorality of Theodicies
|url=http://www.strongatheism.net/library/atheology/immorality_of_theodicies/ |publisher=StrongAtheism.net |year=2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Stretton|first=Dean|title=The Moral Argument from Evil|publisher=The Secular Web |year=1999 |url=http://infidels.org/library/modern/dean_stretton/mae.html |access-date=10 April 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Rachels|first=James|title=God and Moral Autonomy |year=1997 |url=http://infidels.org/library/modern/james_rachels/autonomy.html |access-date=10 April 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Bradley|first=Raymond|title=A Moral Argument for Atheism|publisher=The Secular Web |year=1999 |url=http://infidels.org/library/modern/raymond_bradley/moral.html |access-date=10 April 2014}}</ref>


Betenson also says there is a "rich theological tradition of anti-theodicy".<ref name="Betenson 2016"/> For many theists, there is no seamless theodicy that provides all answers, nor do 21st-century theologians think there should be. As Felix Christen, Fellow at Goethe University, Frankfurt, says, "When one considers human lives that have been shattered to the core, and, in the face of these tragedies the question 'Where is God?'{{nbsp}} we would do well to stand with ] as she says, 'We really don't know'."<ref name="Felix Christen">{{cite journal |last1=Felix Christen |first1=Felix Christen |title=Melancholy Hope: Friendship in Paul Celan's Letters |page=6 |citeseerx=10.1.1.546.7054 }}</ref> Contemporary theodiceans, such as ], describe having doubts about the enterprise of theodicy "in the sense of providing an explanation of precise reasons why there is evil in the world". Plantinga's ultimate response to the problem of evil is that it is not a problem that can be solved. Christians simply cannot claim to know the answer to the "Why?" of evil. Plantinga stresses that this is why he does not proffer a theodicy but only a defense of the logic of theistic belief.<ref name="Self profile">{{cite book |last1=Plantinga |first1=Alvin |editor1-last=Tomberlin |editor1-first=H. |editor2-last=Tomberlin |editor2-first=James E. |editor3-last=van Inwagen |editor3-first=P. |title=Alvin Plantinga "Self Profile" |year=2012 |publisher=Springer Netherlands |isbn=9789400952232 |pages=33, 38}}</ref>{{rp|33}}
====Afterlife====
The ] has also been cited as justifying evil. Christian theologian ] argues that the joys of ] will compensate for the sufferings on earth, and writes:


===Atheistic viewpoint===
{{quote|Without this eternal perspective, we assume that people who die young, who have handicaps, who suffer poor health, who don't get married or have children, or who don't do this or that will miss out on the best life has to offer. But the theology underlying these assumptions have a fatal flaw. It presumes that our present Earth, bodies, culture, relationships and lives are all there is... Heaven will bring far more than compensation for our present sufferings.<ref>If God Is Good: Faith in the Midst of Suffering and Evil, published by Random House of Canada, 2009, page 294</ref>}}
From an atheistic viewpoint, the problem of evil is solved in accordance with the principle of ]: the existence of evil and suffering is reconciled with the assumption that an omnipotent, omnibenevolent, and omniscient God exists by assuming that no God exists.


]'s formulation of the problem of evil in '']'' is this:
Philosopher Stephen Maitzen has called this the "Heaven Swamps Everything" theodicy, and argues that it is false because it conflates compensation and justification. He observes that this reasoning:


{{blockquote| power we allow infinite: Whatever he wills is executed: But neither man nor any other animal are happy: Therefore he does not will their happiness. His wisdom is infinite: He is never mistaken in choosing the means to any end: But the course of nature tends not to human or animal felicity: Therefore it is not established for that purpose. Through the whole compass of human knowledge, there are no inferences more certain and infallible than these. In what respect, then, do his benevolence and mercy resemble the benevolence and mercy of men?<ref>{{cite book |author=Hume, David |title=Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion |publisher=Project Gutenberg |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/4583 |access-date=12 January 2012}}</ref>}}
{{quote|text=...may stem from imagining an ecstatic or forgiving state of mind on the part of the blissful: in heaven no one bears grudges, even the most horrific earthly suffering is as nothing compared to infinite bliss, all past wrongs are forgiven. But “are forgiven” doesn’t mean “were justified”; the blissful person’s disinclination to dwell on his or her earthly suffering doesn’t imply that a perfect being was justified in permitting the suffering all along. By the same token, our ordinary moral practice recognizes a legitimate complaint about child abuse even if, as adults, its victims should happen to be on drugs that make them uninterested in complaining. Even if heaven swamps everything, it doesn’t thereby justify everything.<ref>, European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 1:2 (2009), 107-126</ref>}}


==Theistic arguments==
===Previous lives and karma===
{{See also|Religious responses to the problem of evil}}
The problem of evil is acute for monotheistic religions such as ], ], and ] that believe in a God who is omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent;<ref>, Paul Brians, Washington State University</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Stephen D.|last=O'Leary|title=Arguing the Apocalypse |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=slB8WHY9B6QC&pg=PA34 |year=1998|publisher=] |isbn=978-0-19-535296-2 |pages=34–35 }}, Quote: "As Max Weber notes, however, it is in monotheistic religions that this problem becomes acute."</ref> but the question of why evil exists has also been studied in religions that are non-theistic or polytheistic, such as ], ], and ].<ref name="Harvey2013p141"/><ref name=arthurhermanp5>Arthur Herman, The problem of evil and Indian thought, 2nd Edition, Motilal Banarsidass, {{ISBN|8120807537}}, pp. 5 with Part II and III of the book</ref> Excepting the classic primary response of suffering as redemptive as not being a full theodicy, ] writes that theism has traditionally responded to the problem within three main categories: the common freewill theodicy, the soul making theodicy, and the newer process theology.<ref name="Anderson, A. K."/>{{rp|79}}


=== Cruciform theodicy ===
The theory of ] holds that good acts result in pleasure and bad acts with suffering. Thus it accepts that there is suffering in the world, but maintains that there is no ''undeserved'' suffering, and in that sense, no evil. The obvious objection that people sometimes suffer misfortune that was undeserved is met with by coupling karma with ], so that such suffering is the result of actions in previous lifetimes.<ref></ref> The real problem of evil is the desire to invert the law of karma by way of causing suffering to the innocent, and rewarding pleasure to the guilty as superimposed rule.
Cruciform theodicy is not a full theodical system in the same manner that Soul-making theodicy and Process theodicy are, so it does not address all the questions of "the origin, nature, problem, reason and end of evil."<ref name="Mark S. M. Scott"/>{{rp|145}} It is, instead, a thematic trajectory. Historically, it has been and remains the primary Christian response to the problem of evil.<ref name="Anderson, A. K."/>{{rp|79–80}}


In cruciform theodicy, God is not a distant deity. In the person of Jesus, ] states that a suffering individual will find that God identifies himself "with the suffering of the world".<ref name="James H. Cone oppressed">{{cite book |last1=Cone |first1=James H. |title=God of the Oppressed |date=1997 |publisher=Orbis Books |isbn=9781608330386}}</ref>
===Skeptical theism===
{{Main|Skeptical theism}}
Skeptical theists argue that due to humanity's limited knowledge, we cannot expect to understand God or his ultimate plan. When a parent takes an infant to the doctor for a regular vaccination to prevent childhood disease, it's because the parent cares for and loves that child. The infant however will be unable to appreciate this. It is argued that just as an infant cannot possibly understand the motives of its parent due to its cognitive limitations, so too are humans unable to comprehend God's will in their current physical and earthly state.<ref name="keyway.ca">{{cite web|author=Wayne Blank |url=http://www.keyway.ca/htm2002/whysufer.htm |title=Daily Bible Study - Why Does God Allow Suffering? |publisher=Keyway.ca |accessdate=13 August 2012}}</ref> Given this view, the difficulty or impossibility of finding a plausible explanation for evil in a world created by God is to be expected, and so the argument from evil is assumed to fail unless it can be proven that God's reasons would be comprehensible to us.<ref name="SupposedPOE"></ref>
A related response is that good and evil are strictly beyond human comprehension. Since our concepts of good and evil as instilled in us by God are only intended to facilitate ethical behaviour in our relations with other humans, we should have no expectation that our concepts are accurate beyond what is needed to fulfill this function, and therefore cannot presume that they are sufficient to determine whether what we call evil really is evil. Such a view may be independently attractive to the theist, as it permits an agreeable interpretation of certain biblical passages, such as "...Who makes peace and creates evil; I am the Lord, Who makes all these."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chabad.org/library/bible_cdo/aid/15976 |title=Yeshayahu - Chapter 45 - Tanakh Online - Torah - Bible |publisher=Chabad.org |date= |accessdate=13 August 2012}}</ref>


This theodicy sees incarnation as the "culmination of a series of things Divine love does to unite itself with material creation" to first share in that suffering and demonstrate empathy with it, and second to recognize its value and cost by redeeming it.<ref name="Marilyn McCord Adams">{{cite book |last1=Adams |first1=Marilyn McCord |title=Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God |date=2000 |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=9780801486869 |pages=164–168 |edition=reprint}}</ref> This view asserts that an ontological change in the underlying structure of existence has taken place through the life and death of Jesus, with its immersion in human suffering, thereby transforming suffering itself. Philosopher and Christian priest ] offers this as a theodicy of "]" in which personal suffering becomes an aspect of Christ's "transformative power of redemption" in the world. In this way, personal suffering does not only have value for one's self, it becomes an aspect of redeeming others.<ref name="Marilyn McCord Adams"/>{{rp|ix}}<ref name="Mark S. M. Scott"/>{{rp|158–168}}
A counterpoint to the above is that while these considerations harmonize belief in God with our inability to identify his reasons for permitting evil, there remains a question as to why we have not been given a clear and unambiguous assurance by God that he has good reasons for allowing evil, which would be within our ability to understand. Here discussion of the problem of evil shades into discussion of the ].


For the individual, there is an alteration in the thinking of the believer as they come to see existence in this new light. For example, "On July 16, 1944 awaiting execution in a ] prison and reflecting on Christ's experience of powerlessness and pain, ] penned six words that became the clarion call for the modern theological paradigm: 'Only the suffering God can help'."<ref name="Mark S. M. Scott"/>{{rp|146}}
===Denial of the existence of evil===
This theodicy contains a special concern for the victims of the world, and stresses the importance of caring for those who suffer at the hands of injustice.<ref name="Mark S. M. Scott"/>{{rp|146–148}} Soelle says that Christ's willingness to suffer on behalf of others means that his followers must themselves serve as "God's representatives on earth" by struggling against evil and injustice and being willing to suffer for those on the "underside of history".<ref name="Dorothee Soelle">{{cite book |last1=Soelle |first1=Dorothee |title=Thinking about God |date=2016 |publisher=Wipf & Stock Publishers |isbn=9781498295765|page=134}}</ref>


===Animal suffering===
====Evil as the absence of good====
{{Main|Wild animal suffering|Evolutionary theodicy}}
{{Main|Absence of good}}
In response to arguments concerning natural evil and animal suffering, Christopher Southgate, a trained research biochemist and a Senior Lecturer of Theology and Religion at the ], has developed a "compound evolutionary theodicy."<ref name="Robert John Russell">{{cite journal |last1=Russell |first1=Robert John |title=Southgate's Compound Only-Way Evolutionary Theodicy: Deep Appreciation and Further Directions |journal=Zygon Journal of Religion and Science |date=2018 |volume=53 |issue=3 |pages=711–726 |doi=10.1111/zygo.12438 |s2cid=150123771 |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/zygo.12438}}</ref>{{rp|711}} Southgate uses three methods of analyzing good and harm to show how they are inseparable and create each other.<ref name="Christopher Southgate"/>{{rp|128}} First, he says evil is the consequence of the existence of good: free will is a good, but the same property also causes harm. Second, good is a goal that can only be developed through processes that include harm. Third, the existence of good is inherently and constitutively inseparable from the experience of harm or suffering.<ref name="Christopher Southgate"/>{{rp|41–46}}


] summarizes Southgate's theodicy as beginning with an assertion of the goodness of creation and all sentient creatures.<ref name="Christopher Southgate">{{cite book |last1=Southgate |first1=Christopher |title=The Groaning of Creation: God, Evolution, and the Problem of Evil |date=2008 |publisher=Westminster John Knox Press |isbn=9780664230906}}</ref>{{rp|15}} Next Southgate argues that Darwinian evolution was the only way God could create such goodness. "A universe with the sort of beauty, diversity, sentience and sophistication of creatures that the biosphere now contains" could only come about by the natural processes of evolution.<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|716}} ] points out that ] has made the same claim concerning evolution:
The fifth century theologian ] maintained that evil exists only as a privation or absence of the good. Ignorance is an evil, but is merely the absence of knowledge, which is good; disease is the absence of health; callousness an absence of compassion. Since evil has no positive reality of its own, it cannot be caused to exist, and so God cannot be held responsible for causing it to exist. In its strongest form, this view may identify evil as an absence of God, who is the sole source of that which is good.


{{blockquote|Dawkins{{nbsp}} argues strenuously that selection and only selection can . No one{{snd}}and presumably this includes God{{snd}}could have gotten adaptive complexity without going the route of natural selection{{nbsp}} The Christian positively welcomes Dawkins's understanding of Darwinism. Physical evil exists, and Darwinism explains why God had no choice but to allow it to occur. He wanted to produce design like effects (including humankind) and natural selection is the only option open.<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|714}}}}
A related view, which draws on the ] concept of ], allows that both evil and good have positive reality, but maintains that they are complementary opposites, where the existence of each is dependent on the existence of the other. Compassion, a valuable virtue, can only exist if there is suffering; bravery only exists if we sometimes face danger; self-sacrifice is called for only where others are in need. This is sometimes called the "contrast" argument.<ref>{{cite web|last=Westphal|first=Jonathan|url=http://www.askphilosophers.org/question/4224|title=Response to Ethics Question|accessdate=20 October 2012}}</ref>


According to Russell and Southgate, the goodness of creation is intrinsically linked to the evolutionary processes by which such goodness is achieved, and these processes, in turn, inevitably come with pain and suffering as intrinsic to them.<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|716}} In this scenario, natural evils are an inevitable consequence of developing life.<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|716}} Russell goes on to say that the physical laws that undergird biological development, such as thermodynamics, also contribute to "what is tragic" and "what is glorious" about life.<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|715}} "Gravity, geology, and the specific orbit of the moon lead to the tidal patterns of the Earth's oceans and thus to both the environment in which early life evolved and in which tsunamis bring death and destruction to countless thousands of people".<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|717–718}}
Perhaps the most important criticism of this view is that, even granting its success against the argument from evil, it does nothing to undermine an 'argument from the absence of goodness' which may be pushed instead, and so the response is only superficially successful.<ref name="Does Evil Exist">{{cite web|url=http://www.philosophyofreligion.info/?page_id=62|title=Does Evil Exist?|year=2008|publisher=philosophyofreligion.info|accessdate=22 May 2010}}</ref><ref>Sobel, J.H. Logic and Theism. Cambridge University Press (2004) pp. 438.</ref>


] says nature embodies 'redemptive suffering' as exemplified by Jesus. "The capacity to suffer through to joy is a supreme emergent and an essence of Christianity... The whole evolutionary upslope is a lesser calling of this kind".<ref name="Holmesredemption">{{cite journal |last1=Holmes Rolston III |first1=Holmes Rolston III |title=Does Nature Need To Be Redeemed? |journal=Zygon Journal of Religion and Science |date=1994 |volume=29 |issue=2 |pages=205–229 |doi=10.1111/j.1467-9744.1994.tb00661.x |hdl=10217/36766 |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-9744.1994.tb00661.x|hdl-access=free }}</ref> He calls it the 'cruciform creation' where life is constantly struggling through its pain and suffering toward something higher. Rolston says that within this process, there is no real waste as life and its components are "forever conserved, regenerated, redeemed".<ref name="Holmes Rolston III">{{cite journal |last1=Rolston III |first1=Holmes |title=Redeeming A Cruciform Nature |journal=Zygon Journal of Religion and Science |date=2018 |volume=53 |issue=3 |pages=739–751 |doi=10.1111/zygo.12428 |hdl=10217/196986 |s2cid=149534879 |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/zygo.12428|hdl-access=free }}</ref>
====Evil as illusory====
It is possible to hold that evils such as suffering and disease are mere illusions, and that we are mistaken about the existence of evil. This approach is favored by some ] such as ] and ], and by ]. It is most plausible when considering our knowledge of evils which are geographically or temporally distant, for these might not be real after all. However, when considering our own sensations of pain and mental anguish, there does not seem to be a difference in apprehending that we are afflicted by such sensations and suffering under their influence. If that is the case, it seems that not all evils can be dismissed as illusory.<ref name="Does Evil Exist"/><ref name="Millard J. Erickson 2007, page 445-446">Millard J. Erickson, Christian Theology, Second Edition, Baker Academic, 2007, pp. 445-446.</ref>
Bethany N. Sollereder, Research Fellow at the Laudato Si' Research Institute at Campion Hall, specializes in theology concerning evolution; she writes that evolving life has become increasingly complex, skilled and interdependent. As it has become more intelligent and has increased its ability to relate emotionally, the capacity to suffer has also increased.<ref name="Bethany N. Sollereder">{{cite book |last1=Sollereder |first1=Bethany N. |title=God, Evolution, and Animal Suffering: Theodicy without a Fall |date=2018 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9780429881855}}</ref>{{rp|6}} Southgate describes this using ] which says "the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth" since its beginning. He says God responds to this reality by "co-suffering" with "every sentient being in creation".<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|716–720}}


Southgate's theodicy rejects any 'means to an end' argument that says the evolution of any species justifies the suffering and extinction of any prior species that led to it, and he affirms that "all creatures which have died, without their full potential having been realized, must be given fulfillment elsewhere".<ref name="Christopher Southgate"/>{{rp|63}} Russell asserts that the only satisfactory understanding of that "elsewhere" is the eschatological hope that the present creation will be transformed by God into the New Creation, with its new heaven and new earth.<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|718–720}}
===Turning the tables===


===="Evil" suggests an ethical law==== ====Critique====
A different approach to the problem of evil is to turn the tables by suggesting that any argument from evil is self-refuting, in that its conclusion would necessitate the falsity of one of its premises. One response then is to point out that the assertion "evil exists" implies an ethical standard against which moral value is determined, and then to argue that this standard implies the existence of God (see ]). C. S. Lewis writes:


=====Heaven=====
{{quote|My argument against God was that the universe seemed so cruel and unjust. But how had I got this idea of just and unjust? A man does not call a line crooked unless he has some idea of a straight line. What was I comparing this universe with when I called it unjust?... Of course I could have given up my idea of justice by saying it was nothing but a private idea of my own. But if I did that, then my argument against God collapsed too—for the argument depended on saying the world was really unjust, not simply that it did not happen to please my fancies.<ref>C. S. Lewis ''Mere Christianity'' Touchstone:New York, 1980 pp. 45–46</ref>}}
In what Russell describes as a "blistering attack by ]" on Southgate's theodicy, Wildman asserts that "if God really is to create a heavenly world of 'growth and change and relationality, yet no suffering', that world and not this world would be the best of all possible worlds, and a God that would not do so would be 'flagrantly morally inconsistent'."<ref name="W. Wildman">{{cite journal |last1=Wildman |first1=William J. |title=Incongruous Goodness, Perilous Beauty, Disconcerting Truth: Ultimate Reality and Suffering in Nature |journal=Physics and Cosmology: Scientific Perspectives on the Problem of Natural Evil|editor1-last=Murphy|editor1-first=Nancey C.|editor2-last=Russell|editor2-first=Robert J.|date=2007 |pages=267–294}}</ref>{{rp|290}}<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|724}}


Southgate has responded with what he calls an extension of the original argument: "that this evolutionary environment, full as it is of both competition and decay, is the only type of creation that can give rise to creaturely selves".<ref name="Christopher Southgate"/>{{rp|90}} That means "our guess must be that though heaven can eternally preserve those selves subsisting in suffering-free relationship, it could not give rise to them in the first place".<ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|720}}<ref name="Christopher Southgate"/>{{rp|90}}
The standard criticism of this view is that an argument from evil is not necessarily a presentation of the views of its proponent, but is instead intended to show how premises which the theist is inclined to believe lead him or her to the conclusion that God does not exist (i.e. as a ] of the theist's worldview). Another tact is to reformulate the argument from evil so that this criticism does not apply—for example, by replacing the term "evil" with "suffering", or what is more cumbersome, state of affairs that orthodox theists would agree are properly called "evil".<ref>Oppy, Graham. ''Arguing about Gods'', pp. 261. Cambridge University Press, 2006. ISBN 0521863864</ref>


=====Randomness=====
== General criticisms of defenses and theodicies ==
{{ill|Thomas F. Tracy|WD=Q107183389}} offers a two-point critique: "The first is the problem of purpose: can evolutionary processes, in which chance plays so prominent a role, be understood as the context of God's purposive action? The second is the problem of the pervasiveness of suffering and death in evolution".<ref name="Thomas F. Tracy">{{cite journal |last1=Tracy |first1=Thomas F. |title=Evolutionary Theologies and Divine Action |journal=Theology and Science |date=2008 |volume=6 |issue=1 |pages=107–116 |doi=10.1080/14746700701806106 |s2cid=144846652 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14746700701806106}}</ref>
{{See also|Theodicy#Christian alternatives to theodicy}}
Several philosophers<ref> Cahn, Stephen M. (1977). Cacodaemony. Analysis, Vol. 37, No. 2, pp. 69-73.</ref><ref> Law, Stephen (2010). The Evil-God Challenge. Religious Studies 46 (3):353-373</ref> have argued that just as there exists a problem of evil for theists who believe in an omniscient, omnipotent and omnibenevolent being, so too is there a problem of good for anyone who believes in an omniscient, omnipotent, and omnimalevolent (or perfectly evil) being. As it appears that the defenses and theodicies which might allow the theist to resist the problem of evil can be inverted and used to defend belief in the omnimalevolent being, this suggests that we should draw similar conclusions about the success of these defensive strategies. In that case, the theist appears to face a dilemma: either to accept that both sets of responses are equally bad, and so that the theist does not have an adequate response to the problem of evil; or to accept that both sets of responses are equally good, and so to commit to the existence of an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnimalevolent being as plausible.
Critics have noted that theodicies and defenses are often addressed to the logical problem of evil. As such, they are intended only to demonstrate that it is ''possible'' that evil can co-exist with an omniscient, omnipotent and omnibenevolent being. Since the relevant parallel commitment is only that good can co-exist with an omniscient, omnipotent and omnimalevolent being, not that it is plausible that they should do so, the theist who is responding to the problem of evil need not be committing themselves to something they are likely to think is false.<ref>, King-Farlow, J. (1978), Cacodaemony and Devilish Isomorphism, Analysis, Vol. 38, No. 1, pp. 59–61.</ref> This reply, however, leaves the evidential problem of evil untouched.


According to ], the existence of chance does not negate the power and purposes of a Creator because "it is entirely possible that contingent processes can, in fact, lead to determined ends".<ref name="PolkinghornetoTracy">{{cite journal |last1=Polkinghorne |first1=John C. |title=Evolution and Providence: A Response to Thomas Tracy |journal=Theology and Science |date=2009 |volume=7 |issue=4 |pages=317–322 |doi=10.1080/14746700903239445 |s2cid=144281968 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14746700903239445}}</ref>{{rp|317–318}} But in Polkinghorne's theology, God is not a "Puppetmaster pulling every string", and his purposes are therefore general.<ref name="PolkinghornetoTracy"/>{{rp|317}} ] adds that this means "God is not the explicit designer of each facet of evolution".<ref name="Francisco J. Ayala">{{cite book |last1=Francisco J. Ayala |first1=Francisco J. Ayala |title=Darwin's Gift to Science and Religion |date=2007 |publisher=National Academies Press |isbn=9780309102315 |edition=illustrated, reprint}}</ref><ref name="Robert John Russell"/>{{rp|714}} For Polkinghorne, it is sufficient theologically to assume that "the emergence of some form of self-conscious, God-conscious being" was an aspect of divine purpose from the beginning whether God purposed humankind specifically or not.<ref name="PolkinghornetoTracy"/>{{rp|317–318}}
Another general criticism is that though a theodicy may harmonize God with the existence of evil, it does so at the cost of nullifying morality. This is because most theodicies assume that whatever evil there is exists because it is required for the sake of some greater good. But if an evil is necessary because it secures a greater good, then it appears we humans have no duty to prevent it, for in doing so we would also prevent the greater good for which the evil is required. Even worse, it seems that any action can be rationalized, as if one succeeds in performing it, then God has permitted it, and so it must be for the greater good. From this line of thought one may conclude that, as these conclusions violate our basic moral intuitions, no greater good theodicy is true, and God does not exist. Alternatively, one may point out that greater good theodicies lead us to see every conceivable state of affairs as compatible with the existence of God, and in that case the notion of God's goodness is rendered meaningless.<ref>Dittman, Volker and Tremblay, François {{cite web|title=The Immorality of Theodicies
|url=http://www.strongatheism.net/library/atheology/immorality_of_theodicies/ |publisher=StrongAtheism.net |year=2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Stretton|first=Dean|title=The Moral Argument from Evil|publisher=The Secular Web |year=1999 |url=http://infidels.org/library/modern/dean_stretton/mae.html |deadurl=no |accessdate=10 April 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Rachels|first=James|title=God and Moral Autonomy |year=1997 |url=http://infidels.org/library/modern/james_rachels/autonomy.html |deadurl=no |accessdate=10 April 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Bradley|first=Raymond|title=A Moral Argument for Atheism|publisher=The Secular Web |year=1999 |url=http://infidels.org/library/modern/raymond_bradley/moral.html |deadurl=no |accessdate=10 April 2014}}</ref>


Polkinghorne also links the existence of human freedom to the flexibility created by randomness in the quantum world.<ref name="J. C. Polkinghorne">{{cite book |last1=Polkinghorne |first1=John C. |title=Quarks, Chaos & Christianity Questions to Science and Religion |date=2005 |publisher=Crossroad Publishing Company |isbn=9780824524067 |page=4}}</ref> Richard W. Kropf asserts that free will has its origins in the "evolutionary ramifications" of the existence of chance as part of the process, thereby providing a "causal connection" between natural evil and the possibility of human freedom: one cannot exist without the other.<ref name="Richard W. Kropf">{{cite book |last1=Kropf |first1=Richard W. |title=Evil and Evolution: A Theodicy |date=2004 |publisher=Wipf and Stock Publishers |isbn=9781725211445}}</ref>{{rp|2, 122}} Polkinghorne writes this means that "there is room for independent action in order for creatures to be themselves and "make themselves" in evolution, which therefore makes room for suffering and death.<ref name="PolkinghornetoTracy"/>{{rp|318–319}}
See also ].


{{blockquote|A world in which creatures 'make themselves' can be held to be a greater good than a ready-made world would have been, but it has an inescapable cost. Evolutionary processes will not only yield great fruitfulness, but they will also necessarily involve ragged edges and blind alleys. Genetic mutation will not only produce new forms of life, but it will also result in malignancy. One cannot have the one without the other. The existence of cancer is an anguishing fact about creation but it is not gratuitous, something that a Creator who was a bit more competent or a bit less callous could easily have avoided. It is part of the shadow side of creative process... The more science helps us to understand the processes of the world, the more we see that the good and the bad are inextricably intertwined... It is all a package deal.<ref name="PolkinghornetoTracy"/>{{rp|318}}}}
== By religion ==


====Other responses to animal suffering and natural evil====
===Ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt===
Others have argued:
The problem of evil takes at least four formulations in ancient ]n religious thought, as in the extant manuscripts of ] (''I Will Praise the Lord of Wisdom''), ''Erra and Ishum'', ''The Babylonian Theodicy'', and ''The Dialogue of Pessimism''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Ancient Babylonia—Wisdom Literature |url=http://www.bible-history.com/babylonia/BabyloniaWisdom_Literature.htm |work=Bible History Online |accessdate=19 April 2007}}</ref>
* That natural evils are the result of the ], which corrupted the perfect world created by God.<ref>Linda Edwards, ''A Brief Guide'' (Westminster John Knox, 2001), 62.</ref> Theologian ] argues that "natural evil is the result of a world that's fallen into death" and says that "in Christian tradition, you don't just accept 'the world as it is'" but "you take 'the world as it is' as a broken, shadowy remnant of what it should have been." Hart's concept of the human fall, however, is an ]: "Obviously, wherever this departure from the divine happened, or whenever, it didn't happen within terrestrial history," and "this world, as we know it, from the ] up until today, has been the world of death."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://davidbentleyhart.substack.com/p/a-gregorian-interview |access-date=14 March 2023 |title=A Gregorian Interview |last=Hart |first=David Bentley |date=12 March 2023 |publisher=Leaves in the Wind |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230314140228/https://davidbentleyhart.substack.com/p/a-gregorian-interview |archive-date=14 March 2023 |quote= Moral evil has no essence of its own, so it can only exist as a fabrication of the will continuing to will defectively. And according to tradition, even natural evil is the result of a world that's fallen into death. Somehow, that too follows from the creation of moral evil. So in Christian tradition, you don't just accept 'the world as it is.' You take 'the world as it is' as a broken, shadowy remnant of what it should have been. But obviously wherever this departure from the divine happened, or whenever, it didn't happen within terrestrial history. Now, plenty will argue: 'Oh no. It really happened within history.' No, it really didn't. This world, as we know it, from the Big Bang up until today, has been the world of death.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first1=David Bentley |last1=Hart |year=2005 |title=] |location=Grand Rapids, Michigan |publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans |pages=22, 69 |isbn=9780802829764 |quote=The Christian belief in an ancient alienation from God that{{nbsp}} reduced cosmic time to a shadowy vestige of the world God truly intends.{{nbsp}} Something far more glorious than the pitiable resources of fallen time could ever yield.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first1=David Bentley |last1=Hart |author-link=David Bentley Hart |year=2020 |chapter=The Devil's March: Creatio ex Nihilo, the Problem of Evil, and a Few Dostoyevskian Meditations |title=Theological Territories: A David Bentley Hart Digest |location=Notre Dame, Indiana |publisher=Notre Dame Press |pages=79–80 |isbn=9780268107178 |quote=The fall of rational creation and the conquest of the cosmos by death is something that appears to us nowhere within the course of nature or history; it comes from before and beyond both. We cannot search it out within the closed totality of the damaged world because it belongs to another frame of time, another kind of time, one more real than the time of death.{{nbsp}} It may seem a fabulous claim that we exist in the long grim aftermath of a primeval catastrophe—that this is a broken and wounded world, that cosmic time is a phantom of true time, that we live in an umbratile interval between creation in its fullness and the nothingness from which it was called, and that the universe languishes in bondage to the "powers" and "principalities" of this age, which never cease in their enmity toward the kingdom of God—but it is not a claim that Christians are free to surrender.}}</ref>
In this type of polytheistic context, the chaotic nature of the world implies multiple gods battling for control.
* That forces of nature are neither "goods" nor "evils". They just are. Nature produces actions vital to some forms of life and lethal to others.<ref name="Claudia Card">{{cite book |last1=Card |first1=Claudia |title=The Atrocity Paradigm A Theory of Evil |date=2005 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780195181265 |page=5}}</ref> Other life forms cause diseases, but for the disease, hosts provide food, shelter and a place to reproduce which are necessary things for life and are not by their nature evil.<ref name="Patricia A. Williams"/>{{rp|170}}
* That natural evils are the result of ]<ref>{{cite book | last = Polkinghorne | first = John | author-link = John Polkinghorne | title = Belief in God in an Age of Science | publisher=Yale Nota Bene | year = 2003 | location = New Haven, CT | page = 14 | isbn = 978-0-300-09949-2 }} and also See esp. ch. 5 of his ''Science and Providence''. {{ISBN|978-0-87773-490-1}}</ref> Williams points out that all the natural laws are necessary for life, and even death and natural disaster are necessary aspects of a developing universe.{{refn|group=note|"When stars burn, explode and die, the heavy elements are born and distributed, feeding life. When the first living organisms die, they make room for more complex ones and begin the process of natural selection. When organisms die, new life feeds on them... the sources of evil lie in attributes so valuable that we would not even consider eliminating them in order to eradicate evil."<ref name="Patricia A. Williams"/>{{rp|169, 179}}}}
* That natural evils provide humanity with a knowledge of evil which makes their free choices more significant than they would otherwise be, and so their free will more valuable<ref>] in "Is There a God?" writes that "the operation of natural laws producing evils gives humans knowledge (if they choose to seek it) of how to bring about such evils themselves. Observing you can catch some disease by the operation of natural processes gives me the power either to use those processes to give that disease to other people, or through negligence to allow others to catch it, or to take measures to prevent others from catching the disease." In this way, "it increases the range of significant choice... The actions which natural evil makes possible are ones which allow us to perform at our best and interact with our fellows at the deepest level" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996) 108–109.</ref> or
* That natural evils are a mechanism of divine punishment for moral evils that humans have committed, and so the natural evil is justified.<ref>Bradley Hanson, ''Introduction to Christian Theology'' (Fortress, 1997), 100.</ref>


===Free will defense===
In ], it was thought the problem takes at least two formulations, as in the extant manuscripts of ''Dialogue of a Man with His Ba'' and '']''. Due to the conception of Egyptian gods as being far removed, these two formulations of the problem focus heavily on the relation between evil and people; that is, moral evil.<ref></ref>
{{Main|Free will}}


The problem of evil is sometimes explained as a consequence of ].<ref name=boydp69/><ref name="Lacewing2014p239"/> Free will is a source of both good and of evil, since with free will comes the potential for abuse. People with free will make their own decisions to do wrong, states ], and it is they who make that choice, not God.<ref name=boydp69/> Further, the free will argument asserts that it would be logically inconsistent for God to prevent evil by coercion because then human will would no longer be free.<ref name=boydp69>Gregory A. Boyd, ''Is God to Blame?'' (InterVarsity Press, 2003) {{ISBN|978-0830823949}}, pp. 55–58, 69–70, 76, 96.</ref><ref name="Lacewing2014p239"/>
===Judaism===
{{See also|Holocaust theology}}


The key assumption underlying the free-will defense is that a world containing creatures who are significantly free is innately more valuable than one containing no free creatures. The sort of virtues and values that freedom makes possible – such as trust, love, charity, sympathy, tolerance, loyalty, kindness, forgiveness and friendship – are virtues that cannot exist as they are currently known and experienced without the freedom to choose them or not choose them.<ref name="GF&E">{{cite book |last1=Plantinga |first1=Alvin |title=God, freedom, and evil |date=1977 |publisher=Eerdmans Publishing Company |isbn=9780802817310}}</ref>{{rp|30}} Augustine proffered a theodicy of freewill in the fourth century, but the contemporary version is best represented by Alvin Plantinga.
An oral tradition exists in Judaism that God determined the time of the ]'s coming by erecting a great set of scales. On one side, God placed the captive Messiah with the souls of dead laymen. On the other side, God placed sorrow, tears, and the souls of righteous martyrs. God then declared that the Messiah would appear on earth when the scale was balanced. According to this tradition, then, evil is necessary in the bringing of the world's redemption, as sufferings reside on the scale.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}


Plantinga offers a free will defense, instead of a theodicy, that began as a response to three assertions raised by ].<ref name="Self profile"/> First, Mackie asserts "there is no possible world" in which the "essential" theistic beliefs Mackie describes can all be true. Either believers retain a set of inconsistent beliefs, or believers can give up "at least one of the 'essential propositions' of their faith".<ref name="J. L. Mackie evil">{{cite journal |last1=J. L. Mackie |first1=J. L. Mackie |title=Evil and Omnipotence |journal=Mind |date=1955 |volume=64 |issue=254 |pages=200–212 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2251467 |publisher=Oxford University Press|doi=10.1093/mind/LXIV.254.200 |jstor=2251467 }}</ref>{{rp|90, 97–98}} Second, there is Mackie's statement that an all powerful God, in creating the world, could have made "beings who would act freely, but always go right", and third is the question of what choices would have been logically available to such a God at creation.<ref name="J. L. Mackie evil"/>{{rp|98}}
The Talmud states that every bad thing is for the ultimate good, and a person should praise God for bad things like he praises God for the good things.{{Citation needed|date=April 2013}}
]
Plantinga built his response beginning with ]' assertion that there were innumerable possible worlds available to God before creation.<ref name="Self profile"/>{{rp|38}} Leibniz introduced the term theodicy in his 1710 work {{lang|fr|]}} ("Theodicic Essays on the Benevolence of God, the Free will of man, and the Origin of Evil") where he argued that this is the ] that God could have created.


Plantinga says mankind lives in the actual world (the world God actualized), but that God could have chosen to create (actualize) any of the possibilities including those with moral good but no moral evil. The catch, Plantinga says, is that it is possible that factors within the possible worlds themselves prevented God from actualizing any of the worlds containing moral goodness and no moral evil. Plantinga refers to these factors as the nature of "human essences" and "transworld depravity".<ref name="GF&E"/>{{rp|51–53}}
] in ] holds that God has withdrawn himself so that creation could exist, but that this withdrawal means that creation lacks full exposure to God's all-good nature.{{Citation needed|date=May 2010}}


Across the various possible worlds (transworld) are all the variations of possible humans, each with their own "human essence" (identity): core properties essential to each person that makes them who they are and distinguishes them from others. Every person is the instantiation of such an essence. This "transworld identity" varies in details but not in essence from world to world.<ref name="GF&E"/>{{rp|50–51}} This might include variations of a person (X) who always chooses right in some worlds. If somewhere, in some world, (X) ever freely chooses wrong, then the other possible worlds of only goodness could not be actualized and still leave (X) fully free.<ref name="Plantinga Nature">{{cite book |last1=Plantinga |first1=Alvin |title=The Nature of Necessity |date=1978 |publisher=Clarendon Press |isbn=9780191037177}}</ref>{{rp|184}} There might be numerous possible worlds which contained (X) doing only morally good things, but these would not be worlds that God could bring into being, because (X) would not be free in those worlds to make the wrong choice.<ref name="Plantinga Nature"/>{{rp|187–188}}
=== Christianity ===


An all knowing God would know "in advance" that there are times when "no matter what circumstances" God places (X) in, as long as God leaves (X) free, (X) will make at least one bad choice. Plantinga terms this "transworld depravity".<ref name="Plantinga Nature"/>{{rp|186}} Therefore, if God wants (X) to be a part of creation, and free, then it could mean that the only option such a God would have would be to have an (X) who goes wrong at least once in a world where such wrong is possible. (X)'s free choice determined the world available for God to create.<ref name="Plantinga Nature"/>{{rp|187–188}}
====The Bible====
The ] “has been, both in theory and in fact, the dominant influence upon ideas about God and evil in the Western world.”<ref>David Ray Griffin, ''God, Power, and Evil: a Process Theodicy'' (Westminster, 1976/2004), 31.</ref> The word "evil" occurs 613 times in the ] of the Bible:<ref>http://www.blbclassic.org/search/translationResults.cfm?Criteria=evil&t=KJV.</ref> 481 times in the ]<ref>http://www.blbclassic.org/search/translationResults.cfm?Criteria=evil&t=KJV&csr=1&sf=5.</ref> and 132 times in the ].<ref>http://www.blbclassic.org/search/translationResults.cfm?Criteria=evil&t=KJV&csr=9&sf=5.</ref>


"What is important about transworld depravity is that if a person suffers from it, then it wasn't within God's power to actualize any world in which that person is significantly free but does no wrong".<ref name="GF&E"/>{{rp|48}} Plantinga extends this to all human agents noting, "clearly it is possible that everybody suffers from transworld depravity".<ref name="Plantinga Nature"/>{{rp|186}} This means creating a world with moral good, no moral evil, and truly free persons was not an option available to God. The only way to have a world free of moral evil would be "by creating one without significantly free persons".<ref name="Plantinga Nature"/>{{rp|189}}
In the biblical view, evil is all that is “opposed to God and His purposes” (i.e., sin) or that which, from the human perspective, is “harmful and nonproductive” (i.e., suffering).<ref>''Holman Concise Bible Dictionary'' (B&H Publishing Group, 2011), s.v. Evil, 207; s.v. Sin, 252; s.v. Suffering, 584.</ref>


====Critique====
The fact of evil creates, not only a problem for existence, it creates a problem for belief in an all-good and all-powerful God.<ref>Sarah K. Tyler, Gordon Reid, ''Revise for Religious Studies GCSE: For Edexcel: Religion and Life'' (Heinemann, 2004), 14.</ref> For more on evil in the Bible and the problem of belief it creates, see ].
Most philosophers accept Plantinga's free-will defense and see the logical problem of evil as having been fully rebutted, according to Chad Meister, ], and ].<ref name="2009Meister">{{cite book |last1=Meister |first1=Chad |title=Introducing Philosophy of Religion |date=2009 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781134141791 |page=134}}</ref><ref>Howard-Snyder, Daniel; O'Leary-Hawthorne, John (1998). "Transworld Sanctity and Plantinga's Free Will Defense". International Journal for Philosophy of Religion. 44 (1): 1–21. {{doi|10.1023/A:1003210017171}}. {{ISSN|1572-8684}}.</ref><ref>Alston, William P. (1991). "The Inductive Argument from Evil and the Human Cognitive Condition". Philosophical Perspectives. 5: 29–67. {{doi|10.2307/2214090}}. {{ISSN|1758-2245}}. {{JSTOR|2214090}}. {{S2CID|16744068}}.</ref> ], in referring to Plantinga's argument, has written that "granted ], there is a fairly compelling argument for the view that the existence of evil is logically consistent with the existence of the theistic God".<ref>Rowe, William (1979). "The Problem of Evil and Some Varieties of Atheism". American Philosophical Quarterly. 16 (4): 335–341. {{ISSN|0003-0481}}. {{JSTOR|20009775}}p. 335</ref> In ''Arguing About Gods'', ] offers a dissent; while he acknowledges that "any philosophers seem to suppose that utterly demolishes the kinds of 'logical' arguments from evil developed by Mackie", he also says "I am not sure this is a correct assessment of the current state of play".<ref>Oppy, Graham (2006). Arguing About Gods. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-521-86386-5}}. pp. 262–263</ref> Among contemporary philosophers, most discussion on the problem of evil currently revolves around the ''evidential'' problem of evil, namely that the existence of God is unlikely, rather than logically impossible.<ref>Beebe, James R. (2005). "Logical Problem of Evil". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. {{ISSN|2161-0002}}.</ref>


Critics of the free will response have questioned whether it accounts for the degree of evil seen in this world. One point in this regard is that while the value of free will may be thought sufficient to counterbalance minor evils, it is less obvious that it outweighs the negative attributes of evils such as rape and murder. Another point is that those actions of free beings which bring about evil very often diminish the freedom of those who suffer the evil; for example the murder of a young child prevents the child from ever exercising their free will. In such a case the freedom of an innocent child is pitted against the freedom of the evil-doer, it is not clear why God would remain unresponsive and passive.<ref>], ''Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God'' (Melbourne University Press, 1999), 26.</ref> Christopher Southgate asserts that a freewill defense cannot stand alone as sufficient to explain the abundance of situations where humans are deprived of freewill. It requires a secondary theory.<ref name="Christopher Southgate"/>{{rp|42}}
==== Gnosticism ====
] refers to several beliefs seeing evil as due to the world being created by an imperfect God, the ], which is contrasted with a superior entity. However, this by itself does not answer the problem of evil if the superior entity is omnipotent and omnibenevolent. Different gnostic beliefs may give varying answers, like ], which adopts dualism, in opposition to the doctrine of omnipotence.


Another criticism is that the potential for evil inherent in free will may be limited by means which do not impinge on that free will. God could accomplish this by making moral actions especially pleasurable, or evil action and suffering impossible by allowing free will but not allowing the ability to enact evil or impose suffering.<ref>C. S. Lewis writes: "We can, perhaps, conceive of a world in which God corrected the results of this abuse of free will by His creatures at every moment: so that a wooden beam became soft as grass when it was used as a weapon, and the air refused to obey me if I attempted to set up in it the sound waves that carry lies or insults. But such a world would be one in which wrong actions were impossible, and in which, therefore, freedom of the will would be void; nay, if the principle were carried out to its logical conclusion, evil thoughts would be impossible, for the cerebral matter which we use in thinking would refuse its task when we attempted to frame them." C.S. Lewis '']'' (HarperCollins, 1996) pp. 24–25</ref> Supporters of the free will explanation state that would then no longer be free will.<ref name=boydp69/><ref name="Lacewing2014p239"/> Critics respond that this view seems to imply it would be similarly wrong to try to reduce suffering and evil in these ways, a position which few would advocate.<ref>Michael Tooley, , ''The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy''.</ref>
====Irenaean theodicy====
], posited by ] (2nd century AD–c. 202), has been reformulated by ]. It holds that one cannot achieve moral goodness or love for God if there is no evil and suffering in the world. Evil is ]-making and leads one to be truly moral and close to God. God created an ] distance (such that God is not immediately knowable) so that we may strive to know him and by doing so become truly good. Evil is a means to good for 3 main reasons:


=====Natural evil=====
# '''Means of knowledge''' – Hunger leads to pain, and causes a desire to feed. Knowledge of pain prompts humans to seek to help others in pain.
A third challenge to the free will defence is natural evil, evil which is the result of natural causes (e.g. a child suffering from a disease, mass casualties from a volcano).<ref>. Accessed 10 July 2014.</ref> Criticism of natural evil posits that even if for some reason an all-powerful and all-benevolent God tolerated evil human actions in order to allow free will, such a God would not be expected to also tolerate natural evils because they have no apparent connection to free will.<ref name=boydp69/><ref name="Lacewing2014p239">{{cite book|first=Michael|last=Lacewing|title=Philosophy for AS: Epistemology and Philosophy of Religion|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EoA9BAAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-63583-3 |pages=239–242 }}</ref> ] says differentiating between moral and natural evil is common but, in her view, unjustified. "Because human beings and their choices are part of nature, all evils are natural".<ref name="Patricia A. Williams">{{cite book |last1=Williams |first1=Patricia A. |title=Doing Without Adam and Eve Sociobiology and Original Sin |date=2001 |publisher=Fortress Press |isbn=9781451415438}}</ref>{{rp|169}}
# '''Character building''' – Evil offers the opportunity to grow morally. “We would never learn the art of goodness in a world designed as a hedonistic paradise” (''Richard Swinburne'')
# '''Predictable environment''' – The world runs to a series of natural laws. These are independent of any inhabitants of the universe. Natural Evil only occurs when these natural laws conflict with our own perceived needs. This is not immoral in any way


Advocates of the free will response propose various explanations of natural evils. ]<ref name="Stanford"/><ref name="Good and evil">{{cite book |title=God, Freedom, and Evil |last=Plantinga |first=Alvin |year=1974 |publisher=Harper & Row |isbn=978-0-8028-1731-0 |page= |url=https://archive.org/details/godfreedomevil00plan/page/58 }}</ref> references ],<ref>Alvin Plantinga, ''God, Freedom, and Evil'' (Eerdmans, 1989), 58.</ref> writing of the possibility that natural evils could be caused by supernatural beings such as ].<ref>Bradley Hanson, ''Introduction to Christian Theology'' (Fortress, 1997), 99.</ref> Plantinga emphasizes that it is not necessary that this be true, it is only necessary that this possibility be compatible with the argument from freewill.<ref name="Good and evil"/>{{rp|58}} There are those who respond that Plantinga's freewill response might address moral evil but not natural evil.<ref name="David Kyle Johnson">{{cite journal |last1=Johnson |first1=David Kyle |title=The Failure of Plantinga's Solution to the Logical Problem of Natural Evil |journal=Philo |date=2012 |volume=15 |issue=2 |pages=145–157 |doi=10.5840/Philo20121528 |url=https://www.pdcnet.org/philo/content/Philo_2012_0015_0002_0145_0157}}</ref> Some scholars, such as ], state that free will, or the assumption of greater good through free will, does not apply to animals.<ref>{{cite book|author=David Ray Griffin|title=Evil Revisited: Responses and Reconsiderations|url=https://archive.org/details/evilrevisitedres0000grif |url-access=registration|year=1991|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-0-7914-0612-0 |pages=–95 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=John S. |last=Feinberg |title=The Many Faces of Evil (Revised and Expanded Edition): Theological Systems and the Problems of Evil |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9w_vM7DgWN4C |year=2004|publisher=Crossway|isbn=978-1-4335-1727-3 |pages=94–95 }}</ref> In contrast, a few scholars, while accepting that "free will" applies in a human context, have posited an alternative "free creatures" defense, stating that animals too benefit from their physical freedom though that comes with the cost of dangers they continuously face.<ref name="Nicola Hoggard Creegan 2013 48">{{cite book|author=Nicola Hoggard Creegan|title=Animal Suffering and the Problem of Evil|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xB1pAgAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-993185-9|page=48}}</ref>
====Pelagianism====
The consequences of the ] were debated by ] and ]. Pelagius argues on behalf of original innocence, while Augustine indicts Eve and Adam for original sin. ] is the belief that original sin did not taint all of humanity and that mortal free will is capable of choosing good or evil without divine aid. Augustine's position, and subsequently that of much of Christianity, was that Adam and Eve had the power to topple God's perfect order, thus changing nature by bringing sin into the world, but that the advent of sin then limited mankind's power thereafter to evade the consequences without divine aid.<ref></ref> ] holds that one inherits the nature of sinfulness but not Adam and Eve's guilt for their sin which resulted in the fall.<ref>''Orthodox Theology'', Protopresbyter Michael Pomazansky, Part II "God Manifest in the World" </ref>


The "free creatures" defense has also been criticized, in the case of caged, domesticated and farmed animals who are not free and many of whom have historically experienced evil and suffering from abuse by their owners. Further, even animals and living creatures in the wild face horrendous evils and suffering{{snd}}such as burns and slow death after natural fires or other natural disasters or from predatory injuries{{snd}}and it is unclear, state Bishop and Perszyk, why an all-loving God would create such free creatures prone to intense suffering.<ref name="Nicola Hoggard Creegan 2013 48"/>
====Augustinian theodicy====
St ] (AD 354–430) in his ], as presented in John Hick's book ''Evil and the God of Love'', focuses on the Genesis story that essentially dictates that God created the world and that it was good; evil is merely a consequence of ] (The story of the Garden of Eden where Adam and Eve disobeyed God and caused inherent sin for man). Augustine stated that ] (evil present in the natural world such as natural disasters etc.) is caused by fallen angels, whereas ] (evil caused by the will of human beings) is as a result of man having become estranged from God and choosing to deviate from his chosen path. Augustine argued that God could not have created evil in the world, as it was created good, and that all notions of evil are simply a deviation or privation of goodness. Evil cannot be a separate and unique substance. For example, Blindness is not a separate entity, but is merely a lack or privation of sight. Thus the Augustinian theodicist would argue that the problem of evil and suffering is void because God did not create evil; it was man who chose to deviate from the path of perfect goodness.


====St. Thomas Aquinas==== ===Process theodicy===
"Process theodicy reframes the debate on the problem of evil" by acknowledging that, since God "has no monopoly on power, creativity, and ]", God's power and ability to influence events are, of necessity, limited by human creatures with wills of their own.<ref name="Mark S. M. Scott">{{cite book|title=Pathways in Theodicy: An Introduction to the Problem of Evil|last=Scott|first=Mark. S. M.| year=2015|publisher=Augsburg Fortress Publishers|edition=illustrated, reprint|isbn=9781451464702}}</ref>{{rp|143}} This concept of limitation is one of the key aspects of process theodicy.<ref name="Mark S. M. Scott"/>{{rp|143}} The God of process theology had all options available before actualizing the creation that exists, and chose voluntarily to create free persons knowing the limitations that would impose: he must not unilaterally intervene and coerce a certain outcome because that would violate free will.<ref name="Anderson, A. K.">{{cite thesis |last1=Anderson |first1=A. K. |title=Evil and the God of narrative: Four types of contemporary Christian theodicy |type=PhD dissertation |publisher=Graduate Theological Union |date=2005 |url=https://www.proquest.com/openview/a54181a40db33ce82b8c1818e74340a2/1 |id={{ProQuest|3196560}} }}</ref>{{rp|93}} God's will is only one factor in any situation, making that will "variable in effectiveness", because all God can do is try to persuade and influence the person in the best direction, and make sure that possibility is available.<ref name="Anderson, A. K."/>{{rp|98–100}} Through knowledge of all possibilities, this God provides "ideal aims to help overcome in light of (a) the evil that has been suffered and (b) the range of good possibilities allowed by that past".<ref name="Anderson, A. K."/>{{rp|93}}
Saint Thomas systematized the Augustinian conception of evil, supplementing it with his own musings. Evil, according to St. Thomas, is a privation, or the absence of some good which belongs properly to the nature of the creature.<ref></ref> There is therefore no positive source of evil, corresponding to the greater good, which is God;<ref></ref> evil being not real but rational—i.e. it exists not as an objective fact, but as a subjective conception; things are evil not in themselves, but by reason of their relation to other things or persons. All realities are in themselves good; they produce bad results only incidentally; and consequently the ultimate cause of evil is fundamentally good, as well as the objects in which evil is found.<ref> and </ref>


Process theology's second key element is its stressing of the "here and now" presence of God. God becomes the Great Companion and Fellow-Sufferer where the future is realized hand-in-hand with the sufferer.<ref name="Mark S. M. Scott"/>{{rp|143}} The God of process theology is a benevolent Providence that feels a person's pain and suffering.<ref name="Anderson, A. K."/>{{rp|93}} According to ], "God labors in every situation to mediate the power of compassion to suffering" by enlisting free persons as mediators of that compassion.<ref name="Wendy Farley">{{cite book |last1=Farley |first1=Wendy |title=Tragic Vision and Divine Compassion A Contemporary Theodicy |date=1990 |publisher=Westminster/John Knox Press |isbn=9780664250966|page=118}}</ref> Freedom and power are shared, therefore, responsibility must be as well. Griffin quotes John Hick as noting that "the stirring summons to engage on God's side in the never-ending struggle against the evils of an intractable world" is another key characteristic of process theology.<ref name="Griffin Revisited">{{cite book |last1=Griffin |first1=David Ray |title=Evil Revisited Responses and Reconsiderations |date=1991 |publisher=State University of New York Press |isbn=9780791406120|pages=169–179}}</ref>
====Catholic Encyclopedia====
<blockquote>Evil is threefold, viz., metaphysical evil, moral, and physical, the retributive consequence of moral guilt. Its existence subserves the perfection of the whole; the universe would be less perfect if it contained no evil. Thus fire could not exist without the corruption of what it consumes; the lion must slay the ass in order to live, and if there were no wrong doing, there would be no sphere for patience and justice. God is said (as in Isaiah 45) to be the author of evil in the sense that the corruption of material objects in nature is ordained by Him, as a means for carrying out the design of the universe; and on the other hand, the evil which exists as a consequence of the breach of Divine laws is in the same sense due to Divine appointment; the universe would be less perfect if its laws could be broken with impunity. Thus evil, in one aspect, i.e. as counter-balancing the deordination of sin, has the nature of good. But the evil of sin, though permitted by God, is in no sense due to him; denying the Divine omnipotence, that another equally perfect universe could not be created in which evil would have no place.<ref>]'s </ref></blockquote>


==== Luther and Calvin ==== ==== Critique ====
A hallmark of process theodicy is its conception of God as persuasive rather than coercive.<ref name="Nancy Frankenberry">{{cite journal |last1=Frankenberry |first1=Nancy |title=Some Problems in Process Theodicy |journal=Religious Studies |date=June 1981 |volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=179–197 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/20005735 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|doi=10.1017/S0034412500000962 |jstor=20005735 |s2cid=170658129 }}</ref>{{rp|179}} ] asserts that this creates an either-or dichotomy – either God is persuasive or coercive – whereas lived experience has an "irreducible ambiguity" where it seems God can be both.<ref name="Nancy Frankenberry"/>{{rp|180–181}}
Both ] and ] explained evil as a consequence of the ] and the ]. However, due to the belief in ] and omnipotence, the fall is part of God's plan. Ultimately humans may not be able to understand and explain this plan.<ref>The Problem of Evil in the Western Tradition: From the Book of Job to Modern Genetics, Joseph F. Kelly, p. 94–96</ref>


Since the 1940s, process theodicy has also been "dogged by the problem of 'religious adequacy' of its concept of God" and doubts about the 'goodness' of its view of God.<ref name="Nancy Frankenberry"/>{{rp|186}} It has not resolved all the old questions concerning the problem of evil,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Griffin |first1=David Ray |title=God, Power, and Evil A Process Theodicy |date=2004 |publisher=Presbyterian Publishing Corporation |isbn=9780664229061 |pages=300, 308}}</ref> while it has raised new ones concerning "the nature of divine power, the meaning of God's goodness, and the realistic assessment of what we may reasonably hope for by way of creative advance".<ref name="Nancy Frankenberry"/>{{rp|196}}
====Christian Science====
{{see also|Christian Science#Evil}}
] views evil as having no ultimate reality and as being due to false beliefs, consciously or unconsciously held. Evils such as illness and death may be banished by correct understanding. This view has been questioned, aside from the general criticisms of the concept of evil as an illusion discussed earlier, since the presumably correct understanding by Christian Science members, including the founder, has not prevented illness and death.<ref name="Millard J. Erickson 2007, page 445-446"/> However, Christian Scientists believe that the many instances of spiritual healing (as recounted e.g. in the Christian Science periodicals and in the textbook Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy) are ] of the correctness of the teaching of the unreality of evil.<ref>Robert Peel, 1987, Spiritual Healing in a Scientific Age, San Francisco, Harper and Row, 1987</ref> According to one author, the denial by Christian Scientists that evil ultimately exists neatly solves the problem of evil; however, most people cannot accept that solution.<ref>Ben Dupre, "The Problem of Evil," 50 Philosophy Ideas You Really Need to Know, London, Quercus, 2007, p. 166: "Denying that there is ultimately any such thing as evil, as advocated by Christian Scientists, solves the problem at a stroke, but such a remedy is too hard for most to swallow."</ref>


=== "Greater good" responses ===
====Jehovah's Witnesses====
The greater good defense is more often argued in response to the evidential version of the problem of evil,<ref name="DoughertyMcBrayer2014">{{cite book|first1=Trent|last1=Dougherty|first2=Justin P.|last2=McBrayer|title=Skeptical Theism: New Essays|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MaDNAwAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-966118-3 |pages=265–66 }}</ref> while the free will defense is often discussed in the context of the logical version.<ref>{{cite book|author=] |title=Analytic Philosophy of Religion |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Rx2Qf9ieFKYC&pg=PA243 |year=2002|publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-4020-0530-5|pages=243–244 }}</ref> Some solutions propose that omnipotence does not require the ability to actualize the logically impossible. "Greater good" responses to the problem make use of this insight by arguing for the existence of goods of great value which God cannot actualize without also permitting evil, and thus that there are evils he cannot be expected to prevent despite being omnipotent.
] believe that ] is the original cause of evil.<ref>"Why All Suffering Is Soon to End", ''The Watchtower'', May 15, 2007, page 21, "For some, the obstacle involves what is often called the ''problem of evil''. They feel that if God exists and is almighty and loving, the evil and suffering in the world cannot be explained. No God who tolerates evil could exist, they reason... Satan has surely proved adept at blinding human minds. ...God is not responsible for the wickedness so prevalent in the world." </ref> Though once a perfect angel, Satan developed feelings of self-importance and craved worship, and eventually challenged God's right to rule. Satan caused ] to disobey God, and humanity subsequently became participants in a challenge involving the competing claims of Jehovah and Satan to universal sovereignty.<ref name="pentonsatan">{{Cite book| last = Penton | first = M.J. | title = Apocalypse Delayed | publisher = University of Toronto Press | year = 1997 | pages = 189, 190 | isbn = 9780802079732}}</ref> Other angels who sided with Satan became ]s.


Skeptical theologians argue that, since no one can fully understand God's ultimate plan, no one can assume that evil actions do not have some sort of greater purpose.<ref name=WhitneyTheodicy>{{cite web|last1=Whitney|first1=B|title=Theodicy|url=http://go.galegroup.com/ps/retrieve.do?sgHitCountType=None&sort=RELEVANCE&inPS=true&prodId=GVRL&userGroupName=nysl_ce_colgul&tabID=T003&searchId=R1&resultListType=RESULT_LIST&contentSegment=&searchType=BasicSearchForm&currentPosition=1&contentSet=GALE%7CCX3407710979&&docId=GALE%7CCX3407710979&docType=GALE|website=Gale Virtual Reference Library|publisher=Gale|access-date=10 December 2014}}</ref>
God's subsequent tolerance of evil is explained in part by the value of free will. But Jehovah's Witnesses also hold that this period of suffering is one of non-interference from God, which serves to demonstrate that ]'s "right to rule" is both correct and in the best interests of all intelligent beings, settling the "issue of universal sovereignty". Further, it gives individual humans the opportunity to show their willingness to submit to God's rulership.


====Skeptical theism====
At some future time known to him, God will consider his right to universal sovereignty to have been settled for all time. The ] will have been accomplished through ], and nonconforming humans and demons will have been destroyed. Thereafter, evil (any failure to submit to God's rulership) will be summarily executed.<ref>"Why Does God Allow Evil and Suffering?", ''The Watchtower'', May 1, 2011, page 16, </ref><ref></ref>
{{Main|Skeptical theism}}
"According to skeptical theism, if there were a god, it is likely that he would have reasons for acting that are beyond ken, ... the fact that we don't see a good reason for X does not justify the conclusion that there is no good reason for X".<ref name="Trent Dougherty">{{cite web |last1=Dougherty |first1=Trent |title=Skeptical Theism |url=https://plato.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/encyclopedia/archinfo.cgi?entry=skeptical-theism&archive=win2018 |website=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2018 Edition) |publisher=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |access-date=2 February 2021 |date=2018}}</ref> One standard of sufficient reason for allowing evil is by asserting that God allows an evil in order to prevent a greater evil or cause a greater good.<ref name=wilks31>{{cite book|first=Ian |last=Wilks |editor=Justin P. McBrayer and Daniel Howard-Snyder|title=The Blackwell Companion to The Problem of Evil |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J0ScAgAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=Wiley |isbn=978-1-118-60797-8 |chapter=Chapter 31, for context see Chapters 29 and 30}}</ref> ''Pointless evil'', then, is an evil that does not meet this standard; it is an evil God permitted where there is no outweighing good or greater evil. The existence of such pointless evils would lead to the conclusion there is no benevolent god.<ref name="Rowe, William L.">{{cite journal |last1=Rowe |first1=William L. |title=Friendly Atheism, Skeptical Theism, and the Problem of Evil |journal=International Journal for Philosophy of Religion |date=2006 |volume=59 |issue=2 |pages=79–92 |doi=10.1007/s11153-005-6178-6 |jstor=40023383 |s2cid=170120784 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40023383}}</ref>{{rp|79}} The skeptical theist asserts that humans can't know that such a thing as pointless evil exists, that humans as limited beings are simply "in the dark" concerning the big picture on how all things work together. "The skeptical theist's skepticism affirms certain limitations to knowledge with respect to the realms of value and modality" (method).<ref name="Michael Bergmann2009">{{cite journal |last1=Bergmann |first1=Michael |title=17. Skeptical Theism and the Problem of Evil |editor1-last=Flint |editor1-first=Thomas |editor2-last=Rea |editor2-first=Michael |journal=Oxford Handbook to Philosophical Theology|year=2009|pages=374–401 |url=https://web.ics.purdue.edu/~bergmann/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/OHPT-bergmann-preprint.pdf |publisher=Oxford University Press|doi=10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199289202.003.0018 |isbn=9780199289202 }}</ref>{{rp|6, 8}} "Thus, skeptical theism purports to undercut most ''a posteriori'' arguments against the existence of God".<ref name="Trent Dougherty"/>


Skeptical theism questions the first premise of ] argument: "There exist instances of intense suffering which an omnipotent, omniscient being could have prevented without thereby losing some greater good or permitting some evil equally bad or worse"; how can that be known?<ref name="Michael Bergmann2009"/>{{rp|11–12}} ] argument of divine hiddenness,<ref name="Michael Bergmann2009"/>{{rp|13–14}} and the first premise of ] Hypothesis of Indifference, which begins "Gratuitous evil exists", are also susceptible to questions of how these claimed concepts can be genuinely known.<ref name="Michael Bergmann2009"/>{{rp|15–18}}
====The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ====
Members of ] (LDS Church) believe that the difficulty surrounding the Christian concept of evil stems from a misunderstanding of the nature of God that arose in the centuries after Christ, as post-apostolic theologians began to merge Christianity with Greek metaphysical philosophies such as ], which described divinity as an ], immaterial, formless substance/essence (]) that was the absolute causality and creative source of all that existed (see ]). Mormons teach that through modern day revelation, God restored the truth about His nature, which reinstated the original Judeo-Christian concept of a natural, personal, corporeal God who is the literal Father of the spirits of humankind.<ref>KJV Hebrews 12:9 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/heb/12.9?lang=eng#8</ref> This restoration included the doctrine that “the glory of God is intelligence”<ref>Doctrine and Covenants 93:36 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/dc-testament/dc/93.36?lang=eng#35</ref>—which clarifies that God’s omniscience/omnipotence is not to be understood as metaphysically transcending all limits of nature, but as a perfect comprehension of all things within nature<ref>Doctrine and Covenants 88:6 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/dc-testament/dc/88.6?lang=eng#5</ref>—which gives God the power to bring about any state or condition within those bounds.<ref>B. H. Roberts, The Seventy’s Course in Theology, vol. 2 (Dallas, Texas: S. K. Taylor Publishing Company, 1976), fourth year, lesson 12, 70)</ref> Central to this concept is the restored doctrine that God does not create ] (out of nothing), but uses existing materials to create order out of chaos.<ref>Pearl of Great Price, Abraham 3:24 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/pgp/abr/3.24?lang=eng#23</ref> Because opposition is inherent in nature, and God operates within nature’s bounds, God is therefore not considered the author of evil—nor can He simply eradicate all evil from the universe.


===== Critique =====
As the loving Father of the spirits of mankind, God wanted His offspring<ref>KJV Acts 17:28-29 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/acts/17.28?lang=eng#27</ref> to have the opportunity to develop the same intelligence that He possessed, and thus become heirs of His glory, and co-heirs with their brother Jesus Christ.<ref>KJV Romans 8:16-17 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/rom/8.16?lang=eng#15</ref> Essential to this process is learning to appreciate and choose righteousness,<ref>Pearl of Great Price, Moses 6:55 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/pgp/moses/6.55?lang=eng#54</ref> which is centered on developing the godly attributes taught in the Bible—including faith, love, justice, patience, kindness, charity, obedience, selflessness, humility, mercy, forgiveness, honesty, etc.—in other words, that which counteracts evil, and cultivates everlasting joy. Knowing these principles could only be learned by experience, God gave His children the choice to come to Earth, where they would gain a mortal body—which is patterned after God’s glorified, immortal body, but is subject to pain, sickness, temptation, death, etc. The opposition found in mortality is therefore not viewed by Mormons as a tragic (and arguably, unjust) cancellation of God’s plan for an eternal paradise, rather it was an indispensable part of His plan, as the process of enduring/overcoming trials, challenges, temptations, mistakes, etc. instills the kind of wisdom and insight that can be learned no other way. As Paul wrote in 2 Corinthians 4:17: “…affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.“<ref>KJV 2 Corinthians 4:17 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/2-cor/4.17?lang=eng#16</ref>
Skeptical theism is criticized by ] on the basis that the appearance of some evils having no possible explanation is sufficient to agree there can be none, (which is also susceptible to the skeptic's response); and it is criticized on the basis that, accepting it leads to skepticism about morality itself.<ref name="Almeida and Oppy">{{cite journal |last1=Almeida |first1=Michael J. |last2=Oppy |first2=Graham |title=Sceptical Theism and Evidential Arguments from Evil |journal=Australasian Journal of Philosophy |date=2003 |volume=81 |issue=4 |page=496 |doi=10.1080/713659758 |s2cid=17867179 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/713659758}}</ref>


=====Hidden reasons=====
Another essential element of the learning process of mortality is the principle of agency, which is the privilege to act and choose for one’s self.<ref>https://www.lds.org/topics/agency?lang=eng&query=free+agency</ref> Though agency was absolutely vital for God’s children to be able to learn and progress through experience, it had the effect that all accountable mortals would inevitably sin.<ref>KJV Romans 3:23 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/rom/3.23?lang=eng#22</ref> Because “no unclean thing can inherit the kingdom of God,”<ref>Book of Mormon, 1 Nephi 10:21, https://www.lds.org/scriptures/bofm/1-ne/10.21?lang=eng#20</ref><ref>Book of Mormon, Alma 40:26 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/bofm/alma/11.37?lang=eng#36</ref> this signified that none of God’s children would be able to return to live with Him, thus defeating the purposes of mortality. To remedy this, Jesus Christ offered to sacrifice Himself to pay for the sins of all those would repent,<ref>KJV John 14:6 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/john/14.6?lang=eng#5</ref> thus providing a pathway for redemption. However, this presents a soteriological dilemma<ref>http://speeches.byu.edu/?act=viewitem&id=337</ref> in that a majority of humans have died without a chance to receive the gospel of Jesus Christ—and God could only be considered just if he provided an opportunity for all mortals to repent and be saved. Mormons assert that this problem was addressed with the restoration of the principle of ], which teaches that between His death and resurrection, Christ visited the spirit world and instituted a missionary program to teach those who didn't receive the gospel during mortality.<ref>KJV 1 Peter 3:19-20 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/1-pet/3.19?lang=eng#18</ref><ref>KJV 1 Pet 4:6, https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/1-pet/4.6?lang=eng#5</ref> Proxy baptisms<ref>1 Cor 15:29 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/1-cor/15.29?lang=eng#28</ref> are performed in LDS temples on behalf of those who have died—the recipients of which are then free to accept or reject this ordinance in the spirit world. In this sense, both requirements set forth by Christ as essential for salvation, i.e. belief and baptism,<ref>Mark 16:16 https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/mark/16.16?lang=eng#15)</ref> can be fulfilled by both the living and the dead.
The hidden reasons defense asserts the logical possibility of hidden or unknown reasons for the existence of evil as not knowing the reason does not necessarily mean that the reason does not exist.<ref name="Stanford" /><ref name="IepEvidential" /> This argument has been challenged with the assertion that the hidden reasons premise is as plausible as the premise that God does not exist or is not "an almighty, all-knowing, all-benevolent, all-powerful". Similarly, for every hidden argument that completely or partially justifies observed evils it is equally likely that there is a hidden argument that actually makes the observed evils worse than they appear without hidden arguments, or that the hidden reasons may result in additional contradictions.<ref name="Stanford" /><ref name="Frances2013p110"/> As such, from an inductive viewpoint hidden arguments will neutralize one another.<ref name="Stanford" />


A sub-variant of the "hidden reasons" defense is called the "PHOG"{{snd}}profoundly hidden outweighing goods{{snd}}defense.<ref name="Frances2013p110"/> The PHOG defense, states Bryan Frances, not only leaves the co-existence of God and human suffering unanswered, but raises questions about why animals and other life forms have to suffer from natural evil, or from abuse (animal slaughter, animal cruelty) by some human beings, where hidden moral lessons, hidden social good, and other possible hidden reasons do not apply.<ref name="Frances2013p110">{{cite book|first=Bryan |last=Frances |title=Gratuitous Suffering and the Problem of Evil: A Comprehensive Introduction |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ngeIkSJnh4kC&pg=PA110|date=2013 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-66295-6 |pages=110–123}}</ref>
===Islam===
] scholar ] states that the ] school emphasized God's omnibenevolence. Evil arises not from God but from the actions of his creations who create their own actions independent of God. The ] school instead emphasized God's omnipotence. God is not restricted to follow some objective moral system centered on humans but has the power do whatever he wants with his world. The ] school argued that evil arises from God but that evil in the end has a wiser purpose as a whole and for the future. Some theologians have viewed God as all-powerful and human life as being between the hope that God will be merciful and the fear that he will not.<ref>], The Problem of Suffering: Muslim Theological Reflections, 09/18/10, The Huffington Post, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sherman-a-jackson/on-god-and-suffering-musl_b_713994.html</ref>


====Soul-making or Irenaean theodicy====
===Hinduism===
{{Main|Problem of evil in Hinduism}} {{Main|Irenaean theodicy}}


The soul-making (or Irenaean) theodicy is named after the 2nd-century Greek theologian ] whose ideas were adopted in Eastern Christianity.<ref name=johnhickp201/> It has been modified and advocated in the twenty-first century by ].<ref name=johnhickp201>{{cite book|first=John|last=Hick|title=Evil and the God of Love|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KMcYDAAAQBAJ |year=2016|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|isbn=978-1-349-18048-6 |pages=201–216}}</ref> Irenaen theodicy stands in sharp contrast to the Augustinian. For Augustine, humans were created perfect but fell, and thereafter continued to choose badly of their own freewill. In Irenaeus' view, humans were not created perfect, but instead, must strive continuously to move closer to it.<ref name="Lars Fr. H. Svendsen">{{cite book |last1=Svendsen |first1=Lars Fr. H. |title=A Philosophy of Evil |date=2010 |publisher=Dalkey Archive Press |isbn=9781564785718 |page=51}}</ref>
] is a complex religion with many different currents or schools. As such the ] is answered in several different ways such as by the concept of ].


The key points of a soul-making theodicy begin with its metaphysical foundation: that "(1) The purpose of God in creating the world was soul-making for rational moral agents".<ref name="G. Stanley Kane">{{cite journal |last1=Kane |first1=G. Stanley |title=The Failure of Soul-Making Theodicy |journal=International Journal for Philosophy of Religion |date=1975 |volume=6 |issue=1 |pages=1–22 |doi=10.1007/BF00136996 |jstor=40021034 |s2cid=170214854 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40021034}}</ref> (2) Humans choose their responses to the soul-making process thereby developing moral character. (3) This requires that God remain hidden, otherwise freewill would be compromised. (4) This hiddenness is created, in part, by the presence of evil in the world. (5) The distance of God makes moral freedom possible, while the existence of obstacles makes meaningful struggle possible. (6) The result of beings who complete the soul-making process is "a good of such surpassing value" that it justifies the means. (7) Those who complete the process will be admitted to the kingdom of God where there will be no more evil.<ref name="G. Stanley Kane"/> Hick argues that, for suffering to have soul-making value, "human effort and development must be present at every stage of existence including the afterlife".<ref name="Anderson, A. K."/>{{rp|132, 138}}
===Buddhism===
In ], the problem of evil, or the related problem of ], is one argument against a benevolent, omnipotent creator ], identifying such a notion as ] to a false concept.<ref>], Book XXII, No. 543, vv. 208–209, trans. Gunasekara, V. A. (1993; 2nd ed. 1997). ''The Buddhist Attitude to God''. Retrieved 22 December 2008 from "BuddhaNet" at http://www.buddhanet.net/budsas/ebud/ebdha068.htm. For an alternate translation, see E. B. Cowell (ed.) (1895, 2000), ''The Jataka or Stories of the Buddha's Former Births'' (6 vols.), p. 110. Retrieved 22 December 2008 from "Google Books" at In this Jataka tale, as in much of Buddhist literature, "God" refers to the Vedic/Hindu ].</ref>


] developed a theodicy that began with freewill and then accounts for suffering caused by disease and natural disasters by developing a version of the soul-making theodicy. ] has raised challenges for Lewis's soul-making theodicy. Erik J. Wielenberg draws upon Lewis's broader corpus beyond ''The Problem of Pain'' but also, to a lesser extent, on the thought of two other contemporary proponents of the soul-making theodicy, John Hick and Trent Dougherty, in an attempt to make the case that Lewis's version of the soul-making theodicy has depth and resilience.<ref>{{cite journal|last =Wielenberg|first=Erik J. |title=In Defence of C.S. Lewis' Soul-Making Theodicy: A Reply to Wolterstorff|journal=Journal of Inklings Studies|year=2019 |volume=9|issue=2|pages=192–199 |doi=10.3366/ink.2019.0048 |s2cid=211937140 |url=https://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/ink.2019.0048}}</ref>
===Pandeism===


===== Critique =====
While acknowledging that William L. Rowe had raised "a powerful, evidential argument against ethical theism," theologian William C. Lane contends that the theological theory of ] escapes the problem of evil. Lane writes of Rowe's proof:
The Irenaean theodicy is challenged by the assertion that many evils do not promote spiritual growth, but can instead be destructive of the human spirit. Hick acknowledges that this process often fails in the actual world.<ref name="Hick and Evil">{{Cite book | last = Hick | first = John | author-link = John Hick | title = Evil and the God of Love | publisher=Macmillan | place = London | year = 1966 | isbn = 978-0-06-063902-0 }}{{rp|325, 336}}</ref> Particularly egregious cases known as horrendous evils, which " '']'' reason to doubt whether the participant's life could (given their inclusion in it) be a great good to him/her on the whole," have been the focus of recent work in the problem of evil.<ref>], ''Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God'' (Cornell University, 2000), 203.</ref> Horrendous suffering often leads to dehumanization, and its victims become angry, bitter, vindictive, depressed and spiritually worse.<ref name=Creeganp185/>


Yet, life crises are a catalyst for change that is often positive.<ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Tedeschi |editor1-first=Richard G. |editor2-last=Park |editor2-first=Crystal L. |editor3-last=Calhoun |editor3-first=Lawrence G. |title=Posttraumatic Growth: Positive Changes in the Aftermath of Crisis |date=1998 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781135689803 |pages=99, 117}}</ref> Neurologists ] and ] indicate this has to do with the plasticity of the brain. The brain is highly plastic in childhood development, becoming less so by adulthood once development is completed. Thereafter, the brain resists change.<ref name="Bruce E. Wexler">{{cite book |last1=Wexler |first1=Bruce E.|title=Brain and Culture Neurobiology, Ideology, and Social Change |date=2008 |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=9780262265140}}</ref>{{rp|5–9}} The neurons in the brain can only make permanent changes "when the conditions are right" because the brain's development is dependent upon the stimulation it receives.<ref name="Bryan Kolb">{{cite book |last1=Kolb |first1=Bryan |title=Brain Plasticity and Behavior |date=2013 |publisher=Psychology Press |isbn=9781134784141}}</ref>{{rp|7}} <ref name="Bruce E. Wexler"/>{{rp|13}} When the brain receives the powerful stimulus that experiences like bereavement, life-threatening illness, the trauma of war and other deeply painful experiences provide, a prolonged and difficult internal struggle, where the individual completely re-examines their self-concept and perceptions of reality, reshapes neurological structures.<ref name="Bruce E. Wexler"/>{{rp|6–7}}<ref name="Horowitz and Van Eeden">{{cite journal |last1=Horowitz |first1=D. S. |last2=Van Eeden |first2=R. |title=Exploring the learnings derived from catalytic experiences in a leadership context |journal=SA Journal of Human Resource Management/SA Tydskrif vir Menslikehulpbronbestuur |date=2015 |volume=13 |issue=1 |url=https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/598/895}}</ref>{{rp|4}} The literature refers to ''turning points,''<ref name="McAdams">{{cite book |last1=McAdams |first1=Dan P. |title=The Redemptive Self: Stories Americans Live By |date=2013 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780199969760 |edition=Revised and Expanded}}</ref> ''defining moments,''<ref name="Badaracco">{{cite book |last1=Badaracco |first1=Joseph L. Jr. |title=Defining Moments When Managers Must Choose Between Right and Right |date=2016 |publisher=Harvard Business Review Press |isbn=9781633692404}}</ref> ''crucible moments,''<ref name="Bennis and Thomas">{{cite book |last1=Bennis |first1=Warren G. |last2=Thomas |first2=Robert J. |title=Geeks and Geezers: How Era, Values, and Defining Moments Shape Leaders – How Tough Times Shape Good Leaders |date=2002 |publisher=Harvard Business School Press}}</ref> and ''life-changing events.''<ref name="Boyatzis and McKee">{{cite book |last1=Boyatzis |first1=Richard E. |last2=McKee |first2=Annie |title=Resonant Leadership: Renewing Yourself and Connecting with Others Through Mindfulness, Hope, and Compassion |date=2005 |publisher=Harvard Business Press |isbn=9781591395638 |edition=illustrated}}</ref> These are experiences that form a catalyst in an individual's life so that the individual is personally transformed, often emerging with a sense of learning, strength and growth, that empowers them to pursue different paths than they otherwise would have.<ref name="Horowitz and Van Eeden"/>{{rp|2}}
{{quote|However, it does not count against pandeism. In pandeism, God is no superintending, heavenly power, capable of hourly intervention into earthly affairs. No longer existing "above," God ''cannot'' intervene from above and cannot be blamed for failing to do so. Instead God ''bears'' all suffering, whether the fawn's or anyone else's.


Steve Gregg acknowledges that much human suffering produces no discernible good, and that the greater good does not fully address every case. "Nonetheless, the fact that sufferings are temporal, and are often justly punitive, corrective, sanctifying and ennobling stands as one of the important aspects of a biblical worldview that somewhat ameliorates the otherwise unanswerable problem of pain".<ref name="Steve Gregg">{{cite book |last1=Gregg |first1=Steve |title=All You Want to Know About Hell: Three Christian Views of God's Final Solution to the Problem of Sin |date=2013 |publisher=Thomas Nelson |isbn=9781401678319 |page=2}}</ref>
Even so, a skeptic might ask, "Why must there be ''so'' much suffering,? Why could not the world's design omit or modify the events that cause it?" In pandeism, the reason is clear: to remain unified, a world must convey information through transactions. Reliable conveyance requires relatively simple, uniform laws. Laws designed to skip around suffering-causing events or to alter their natural consequences (i.e., their consequences under simple laws) would need to be vastly complicated or (equivalently) to contain numerous exceptions. Such laws would not be discernable from within the world. From that standpoint, the only one that matters, they would not be laws at all. Absent laws, transactions would not reliably convey information, and the world could not be one. God could not consistently become such a world.<ref name="Lane">{{Cite journal | last = Lane | first = William C. | date = January 2010 |title = Leibniz's Best World Claim Restructured | url = http://apq.press.illinois.edu/47/1/lane.html | journal = American Philosophical Journal | publisher = | volume = 47 | issue = 1 | pages = 57–84 |accessdate=9 March 2014}}</ref>{{rp|76–77}}}}


A second critique argues that, were it true that God permitted evil in order to facilitate spiritual growth, it might be reasonable to expect that evil would disproportionately befall those in poor spiritual health such as the decadent wealthy, who often seem to enjoy lives of luxury insulated from evil, whereas many of the pious are poor and well acquainted with worldly evils.<ref>The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "The Problem of Evil", James R. Beebe</ref> Using the example of ], ] argues that, contrary "to the modern mind", wealth is condemned in Christian theology for the very reason that wealth insulates from evil and suffering, and the spiritual growth such experiences can produce. Chesterton explains that Francis pursued poverty "as men have dug madly for gold" because its concomitent suffering is a path to piety.<ref name="G. K. Chesterton">{{cite book |last1=Chesterton |first1=G. K. |title=Saint Francis of Assisi |date=2009 |publisher=Floating Press |isbn=9781775413776}}</ref>{{rp|32, 89–90}}
== By philosophers ==
]


] asserts that human character can be developed directly in constructive and nurturing loving ways, and it is unclear why God would consider or allow evil and suffering to be necessary or the preferred way to spiritual growth.<ref name=johnhickp201/>{{rp|376–379}} Hick asserts that suffering is necessary, not only for some specific virtues, but that "...one who has attained to goodness by meeting and eventually mastering temptation, and thus by rightly making choices in concrete situations, is good in a richer and more valuable sense than would be one created ''ab initio'' in a state either of innocence or of virtue. In the former case, which is that of the actual moral achievements of mankind, the individual's goodness has within it the strength of temptations overcome, a stability based upon an accumulation of right choices, and a positive and responsible character that comes from the investment of costly personal effort."<ref name="Hick and Evil"/>{{rp|255}}
===Epicurus<!--'Epicurean paradox' redirects here-->===
] is generally credited with first expounding the problem of evil, and it is sometimes called "the Epicurean paradox" or "the riddle of Epicurus":


However, the virtues identified as the result of "soul-making" may only appear to be valuable in a world where evil and suffering already exist. A willingness to sacrifice oneself in order to save others from persecution, for example, is virtuous because persecution exists. Likewise, the willingness to donate one's meal to those who are starving is valuable because starvation exists. If persecution and starvation did not occur, there would be no reason to consider these acts virtuous. If the virtues developed through soul-making are only valuable where suffering exists, then it is not clear what would be lost if suffering did not exist.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rationalrealm.com/downloads/philosophy/ProblemOfEvil.pdf|website=Rational Realm|title=The Problem of Evil|first=Leslie|last=Allan|date=28 July 2015|access-date=12 September 2018}}</ref> ] says that such a discussion presupposes that virtues are only instrumentally valuable instead of intrinsically valuable.<ref name="C. Robert Mesle">{{cite journal |last1=Mesle |first1=C. Robert |title=The Problem of Genuine Evil: A Critique of John Hick's Theodicy |journal=The Journal of Religion |date=1986 |volume=66 |issue=4 |page=413 |doi=10.1086/487442 |jstor=1202728 |s2cid=170193070 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1202728}}</ref>
<blockquote>"Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?" — 'the Epicurean paradox'.<ref>Hospers, John. ''An Introduction to Philosophical Analysis''. 3rd Ed. Routledge, 1990, p. 310.</ref></blockquote>


The soul-making reconciliation of the problem of evil, states Creegan, fails to explain the need or rationale for evil inflicted on animals and resultant animal suffering, because "there is no evidence at all that suffering improves the character of animals, or is evidence of soul-making in them".<ref name=Creeganp185>{{cite book|author=Nicola Hoggard Creegan |title=Animal Suffering and the Problem of Evil |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jWSL-zZ5x4QC |year=2013|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-993184-2 |page=185 with footnote 3 }}</ref> Hick differentiates between animal and human suffering based on "our capacity imaginatively to anticipate the future".<ref name="Hick and Evil"/>{{rp|314}}
Epicurus himself did not leave any written form of this argument. It can be found in Christian theologian ]'s ''Treatise on the Anger of God''{{refn|group=n|{{bquote|''Quod si haec ratio vera est, quam stoici nullo modo videre potuerunt, dissolvitur etiam argumentum illud Epicuri. Deus, inquit, aut vult tollere mala et non potest; aut potest et non vult; aut neque vult, neque potest; aut et vult et potest. Si vult et non potest, imbecillis est; quod in Deum non cadit. Si potest et non vult, invidus; quod aeque alienum a Deo. Si neque vult, neque potest, et invidus et imbecillis est; ideoque neque Deus. Si vult et potest, quod solum Deo convenit, unde ergo sunt mala? aut cur illa non tollit? Scio plerosque philosophorum, qui providentiam defendunt, hoc argumento perturbari solere et invitos pene adigi, ut Deum nihil curare fateantur, quod maxime quaerit Epicurus.''|||Lactantius|De Ira Dei<ref name=LactantiusquotingEpicurus>{{cite book|author=Lactantius|title=De Ira Dei|chapter=Caput XIII|page=121|url=http://www.documentacatholicaomnia.eu/02m/0240-0320,_Lactantius,_De_Ira_Dei,_MLT.pdf|language=Latin}} At the Documenta Catholica Omnia.</ref>}}
{{bquote|But if this account is true, which the Stoics were in no manner able to see, that argument also of Epicurus is done away. God, he says, either wishes to take away evils, and is unable; or He is able and is unwilling; or He is neither willing nor able, or He is both willing and able. If He is willing and is unable, He is feeble, which is not in accordance with the character of God; if He is able and unwilling, He is envious, which is equally at variance with God; if He is neither willing or able, He is both envious and feeble, and therefore not God; if He is both willing and able, which alone is suitable to God,
from what source then are evils or why does He not remove them? I know that many of the philosophers, who defend providence, are accustomed to be disturbed by this argument, and are almost driven against their will to admit that God takes no interest in anything, which Epicurus especially aims at.|||Lactantius|On the Anger of God<ref name=LactantiusquotingEpicurusEnglish>{{cite book|series=Ante-Nicene Christian Library. Translations of the writings of the Fathers down to A.D. 325. Vol XXII|editor1-first=Alexander|editor1-last=Rev. Roberts|editor2-first=James|editor2-last=Donaldson|place=Edinburgh|publisher=T. & T. Clark, George Street|year=1871|title=The works of Lactantius|volume=II|chapter=On the Anger of God. Chapter XIII|page=28|url=https://archive.org/stream/workslactantius00lactgoog#page/n40/mode/1up}} At the ].</ref>}}


====Afterlife====
}} where Lactantius critiques the argument. Epicurus's argument as presented by Lactantius actually argues that a god that is all-powerful and all-good does not exist and that the gods are distant and uninvolved with man's concerns. The gods are neither our friends nor enemies.
] suggested the ] theodicy to address the problem of evil and to justify the existence of evil.<ref name="stump2008p49">{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2wDHCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA49 | title=The Evidential Argument from Evil | publisher=Indiana University Press | first=Eleonore | last=Stump | editor-first=Daniel | editor-last=Howard-Snyder | year=2008 | pages=49–52 | isbn=978-0-253-11409-9}}</ref> The premise behind this theodicy is that the afterlife is unending, human life is short, and God allows evil and suffering in order to judge and grant everlasting heaven or hell based on human moral actions and human suffering.<ref name=stump2008p49/><ref name="Goetz2008p139"/><ref>{{cite book|first1=Benjamin W.|last1=McCraw|first2=Robert|last2=Arp|title=The Problem of Evil: New Philosophical Directions|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oUA1CwAAQBAJ |year=2015|publisher=Lexington|isbn=978-1-4985-1208-4 |pages=132–133 }}</ref> Aquinas says that the afterlife is the greater good that justifies the evil and suffering in current life.<ref name=stump2008p49/> Christian author Randy Alcorn argues that the joys of ] will compensate for the sufferings on earth.<ref>If God Is Good: Faith in the Midst of Suffering and Evil, published by Random House of Canada, 2009, p. 294; Quote: Without this eternal perspective, we assume that people who die young, who have handicaps, who suffer poor health, who don't get married or have children, or who don't do this or that will miss out on the best life has to offer. But the theology underlying these assumptions have a fatal flaw. It presumes that our present Earth, bodies, culture, relationships and lives are all there is... Heaven will bring far more than compensation for our present sufferings.</ref>


Stephen Maitzen has called this the "Heaven Swamps Everything" theodicy, and argues that it is false because it conflates compensation and justification.<ref name="Goetz2008p139">{{cite book|first=Stewart|last=Goetz|title=Freedom, Teleology, and Evil|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cZmvAwAAQBAJ |year=2008|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |isbn=978-1-4411-7183-2 |pages=139–147 }}</ref><ref>, European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 1:2 (2009), 107–126, Quote: "... may stem from imagining an ecstatic or forgiving state of mind on the part of the blissful: in heaven no one bears grudges, even the most horrific earthly suffering is as nothing compared to infinite bliss, all past wrongs are forgiven. But "are forgiven" doesn't mean "were justified"; the blissful person's disinclination to dwell on his or her earthly suffering doesn't imply that a perfect being was justified in permitting the suffering all along. By the same token, our ordinary moral practice recognizes a legitimate complaint about child abuse even if, as adults, its victims should happen to be on drugs that make them uninterested in complaining. Even if heaven swamps everything, it doesn't thereby justify everything."</ref> This theodical view is based on the principle that under a just God, "no innocent creature suffers misery that is not compensated by happiness at some later stage (e. g. an afterlife)" but in the traditional view, animals don't have an afterlife.<ref name=jolley2014p66>{{cite book|first=Nicholas|last=Jolley|editor=Larry M. Jorgensen and Samuel Newlands|title=New Essays on Leibniz's Theodicy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lNPQAgAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-966003-2 |pages=64–68 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first1=Andrew|last1=Chignell|first2=Terence|last2=Cuneo|first3=Matthew C.|last3=Halteman|title=Philosophy Comes to Dinner: Arguments About the Ethics of Eating|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rDCvCgAAQBAJ |year=2015|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-57807-6|page=199}}</ref>
===David Hume===
]'s formulation of the problem of evil in '']'':
<blockquote>"Is he willing to prevent evil, but not able? then is he impotent. Is he able, but not willing? then is he malevolent. Is he both able and willing? whence then is evil?"<ref>{{cite web |author=Hume, David |title=Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion |publisher=Project Gutenberg |url=http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4583 |accessdate=12 January 2012}}</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>" power we allow infinite: Whatever he wills is executed: But neither man nor any other animal are happy: Therefore he does not will their happiness. His wisdom is infinite: He is never mistaken in choosing the means to any end: But the course of nature tends not to human or animal felicity: Therefore it is not established for that purpose. Through the whole compass of human knowledge, there are no inferences more certain and infallible than these. In what respect, then, do his benevolence and mercy resemble the benevolence and mercy of men?"</blockquote>
]


Maintzen's argument has been rejected by Seyyed Jaaber Mousavirad based on the strong account of the compensation theodicy. Two accounts of compensation theodicy can be proposed. Based on the weak interpretation that only considers compensation in afterlife, this criticism would be acceptable, but based on the strong account which consider both the "compensation in afterlife" and "the primary benefits of evils" (even if they are not greater), the compensation theodicy can be defended.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Mousavirad |first=Seyyed Jaaber |date=2022-07-02 |title=Theory of Compensation and the Problem of Evil; a New Defense |url=https://www.philosophy-of-religion.eu/index.php/ejpr/article/view/3357 |journal=European Journal for Philosophy of Religion |language=en |volume=14 |issue=2 |pages=197–198 |doi=10.24204/ejpr.2022.3357 |s2cid=250298800 |issn=1689-8311}}</ref>
===Gottfried Leibniz===
In his '']'', the ] ] denied the goodness and omnipotence of God on account of the ]s experienced in this earthly life. ] introduced the term theodicy in his 1710 work '']'' ("Theodicic Essays on the Benevolence of God, the Free will of man, and the Origin of Evil") which was directed mainly against Bayle. He argued that this is the ] that God could have created.


===Evil not real===
Imitating the example of Leibniz, other philosophers also called their treatises on the problem of evil theodicies. ]'s popular novel '']'' mocked Leibnizian optimism through the fictional tale of a naive youth.
In the second century, Christian theologians attempted to reconcile the problem of evil with an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent God, by denying that evil exists. Among these theologians, ] offered several theodicies, of which one was called "privation theory of evil" which was adopted thereafter.<ref name="Kelly2002p42">{{cite book|author=Joseph Francis Kelly|title=The Problem of Evil in the Western Tradition|url=https://archive.org/details/problemofevilint00jose |url-access=registration|year=2002|publisher=Liturgical Press|isbn=978-0-8146-5104-9 |page= }}</ref> The other is a more modern version of "deny evil", suggested by Christian Science, wherein the perception of evil is described as a form of illusion.<ref name="Millard J. Erickson 2007, page 445-446"/>


=== Thomas Robert Malthus === ====Privation theory of evil====
{{Main|Absence of good}}
The population and economic theorist ] argued in a 1798 essay that evil exists to spur human creativity and production. Without evil or the necessity of strife mankind would have remained in a savage state since all amenities would be provided for.<ref>Malthus T.R. 1798. An essay on the principle of population. Oxford World's Classics reprint. p158</ref>
The early version of "deny evil" is called the "privation theory of evil", so named because it described evil as a form of "lack, loss or privation". One of the earliest proponents of this theory was the 2nd-century Clement of Alexandria who, according to Joseph Kelly,<ref name="Kelly2002p42"/> stated that "since God is completely good, he could not have created evil; but if God did not create evil, then it cannot exist". Evil, according to Clement, does not exist as a positive, but exists as a negative or as a "lack of good".<ref name="Kelly2002p42"/> Clement's idea was criticised for its inability to explain suffering in the world, if evil did not exist. He was also pressed by Gnostics scholars with the question as to why God did not create creatures that "did not lack the good". Clement attempted to answer these questions ontologically through dualism, an idea found in the Platonic school,<ref name=jeffrey49>{{cite book|author=R. Jeffery |title=Evil and International Relations: Human Suffering in an Age of Terror |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7WyADAAAQBAJ |year=2007|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=978-0-230-61035-4 |page=49 }}</ref> that is by presenting two realities, one of God and Truth, another of human and perceived experience.<ref>{{cite book|author=Joseph Francis Kelly|title=The Problem of Evil in the Western Tradition|url=https://archive.org/details/problemofevilint00jose |url-access=registration|year=2002|publisher=Liturgical Press|isbn=978-0-8146-5104-9 |pages=–43 }}</ref>


The fourth-century theologian ] adopted the privation theory, and in his ''Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Love'', maintained that evil exists as "absence of the good".<ref name=jeffrey49/> God is a spiritual, (not corporeal), Being who is sovereign over other lesser beings because God created material reality ''ex nihilo''. Augustine's view of evil relies on the causal principle that every cause is superior to its effects.<ref name="Mann"/>{{rp|43}} God is innately superior to his creation, and "everything that God creates is good."<ref name="Mann">{{cite book |last1=Mann |first1=William E. |editor1-last=Stump |editor1-first=Eleonore |editor2-last=Meconi |editor2-first=David Vincent |title=The Cambridge Companion to Augustine |date=2001 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1107025332 |pages=40–48 |edition=2nd |chapter=Augustine on evil and original sin}}</ref>{{rp|40–42}} Every creature is good, but "some are better than others".<ref name="Mann"/>{{RP|44}} However, created beings also have tendencies toward mutability and corruption because they were created out of nothing. They are subject to the prejudices that come from personal perspective: humans care about what affects themselves, and fail to see how their privation might contribute to the common good. For Augustine, evil, when it refers to God's material creation, refers to a privation, an absence of goodness "''where goodness might have been''".<ref name="Mann"/>{{rp|44}} Evil is not a substance that exists in its own right separately from the nature of all Being.<ref name="Pereira2013p54">{{cite book|author=Jairzinho Lopes Pereira |title=Augustine of Hippo and Martin Luther on Original Sin and Justification of the Sinner|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4iVcAgAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht |isbn=978-3-647-55063-3 |pages=54–55 }}</ref> This absence of good is an act of the will, "a culpable rejection of the infinite bounty God offers in favor of an infinitely inferior fare", freely chosen by the will of an individual.<ref name="Mann"/>{{rp|46}}
===Immanuel Kant===
] argued for sceptical theism. He claimed there is a reason all possible theodicies must fail: evil is a personal challenge to every human being and can be overcome only by faith.<ref>See Kant's essay, "Concerning the Possibility of a Theodicy and the Failure of All Previous Philosophical Attempts in the Field" (1791). Stephen Palmquist explains why Kant refuses to solve the problem of evil in "Faith in the Face of Evil", Appendix VI of (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000).</ref> He wrote:<ref>As quoted in </ref>
<blockquote>We can understand the necessary limits of our reflections on the subjects which are beyond our reach. This can easily be demonstrated and will put an end once and for all to the trial.</blockquote>


Ben Page and ] observe that although there are numerous philosophers who explicitly advocate the ], it also appears to be derived from a functional analysis of goodness, which is a widely embraced perspective in contemporary philosophy.<ref>{{cite journal|author1= Page, Ben|author2= ]| date=2020 |title=Meeting the Evil God Challenge |url= |journal=] |volume=101 |issue=3 |pages=489–514 |doi=10.1111/papq.12304 |access-date= |name-list-style=vanc}}</ref><ref>Korsgaard, Christine M., 'Aristotle's Function Argument', The Constitution of Agency: Essays on Practical Reason and Moral Psychology (Oxford, 2008; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 Jan. 2009), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199552733.003.0005, accessed 7 Feb. 2023.</ref>
===Victor Cousin===
] (1856) stridently argued that different competing philosophical ideologies all had some claim on truth, as they all had arisen in defense of some truth. He however argued that there was a theodicy which united them, and that one should be free in quoting competing and sometimes contradictory ideologies in order to gain a greater understanding of truth through their reconciliation.<ref>{{cite book
| last = Cousin
| first = Victor
| authorlink = Victor Cousin
| title = The True, the Beautiful, and the Good
| publisher=D, Appleton & Co.
| year = 1856
| pages = 75–101
| isbn = 978-1-4255-4330-3 }}</ref>


=== Peter Kreeft === =====Critique=====
This view has been criticized as semantics: substituting a definition of evil with "loss of good", of "problem of evil and suffering" with the "problem of loss of good and suffering", neither addresses the issue from the theoretical point of view nor from the experiential point of view.<ref name=pereira2013p56>{{cite book|author=Jairzinho Lopes Pereira |title=Augustine of Hippo and Martin Luther on Original Sin and Justification of the Sinner |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4iVcAgAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht |isbn=978-3-647-55063-3 |page=56 with footnote 25 }}</ref> Scholars who criticize the privation theory state that murder, rape, terror, pain and suffering are real life events for the victim, and cannot be denied as mere "lack of good".<ref>Todd C. Calder (2007), , American Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 44, No. 4, pp. 371–81</ref> Augustine, states Pereira, accepted suffering exists and was aware that the privation theory was not a solution to the problem of evil.<ref name=pereira2013p56/>
Christian philosopher ] provides several answers to the problem of evil and ], including that a) God may use short-term evils for long-range goods, b) God created the possibility of evil, but not the evil itself, and that free will was necessary for the highest good of real love. Kreeft says that being all-powerful doesn't mean being able to do what is logically contradictory, e.g., giving freedom with no potentiality for sin, c) God's own suffering and death on the cross brought about his supreme triumph over the devil, d) God uses suffering to bring about moral character, quoting apostle Paul in Romans 5, e) Suffering can bring people closer to God, and f) The ultimate "answer" to suffering is Jesus himself, who, more than any explanation, is our real need.<ref>{{cite book | last = Strobel | first = Lee | authorlink =Lee Strobel | title = The Case for Faith | publisher=Zondervan | year = 2000 | location = Grand Rapids, MI | pages = 25–56 | url = | id = | isbn = }}</ref>


=== William Hatcher === ====Evil as illusory====
An alternative modern version of the privation theory is by ], which asserts that evils such as suffering and disease only appear to be real, but in truth are illusions, and in reality evil does not exist.<ref name="Millard J. Erickson 2007, page 445-446"/> The theologians of Christian Science, states Stephen Gottschalk, posit that the Spirit is of infinite might, mortal human beings fail to grasp this and focus instead on evil and suffering that have no real existence as "a power, person or principle opposed to God".<ref name=Gottschalkp65/>
Mathematical logician ] (a member of the ]) made use of relational logic to claim that very simple models of moral value cannot be consistent with the premise of evil as an absolute, whereas goodness as an absolute is entirely consistent with the other postulates concerning moral value.<ref>Hatcher, William, ''''</ref> In Hatcher's view, one can only validly say that if an act A is "less good" than an act B, one cannot logically commit to saying that A is absolutely evil, unless one is prepared to abandon other more reasonable principles.

The illusion version of privation theory theodicy has been critiqued for denying the reality of crimes, wars, terror, sickness, injury, death, suffering and pain to the victim.<ref name= Gottschalkp65/> Further, adds Millard Erickson, the illusion argument merely shifts the problem to a new problem, as to why God would create this "illusion" of crimes, wars, terror, sickness, injury, death, suffering and pain; and why God does not stop this "illusion".<ref name="Millard J. Erickson 1998 446–47"/>

===Turning the tables===
A different approach to the problem of evil is to turn the tables by suggesting that any argument from evil is self-refuting, in that its conclusion would necessitate the falsity of one of its premises. One response{{snd}}called the defensive response{{snd}}has been to point out that the assertion "evil exists" implies an ethical standard against which moral value is determined, and then to argue that the fact that such a universal standard exists at all implies the existence of God.<ref>C. S. Lewis ''Mere Christianity'' Touchstone: New York, 1980 pp. 45–46</ref>

===Pandeism===
] is a modern theory that unites deism and pantheism, and asserts that God created the universe but during creation became the universe.<ref>, Encyclopædia Britannica</ref> In pandeism, God is no superintending, heavenly power, capable of hourly intervention into earthly affairs. No longer existing "above," God ''cannot'' intervene from above and cannot be blamed for failing to do so. God, in pandeism, was omnipotent and omnibenevolent, but in the form of universe is no longer omnipotent, omnibenevolent.<ref name="Lane">{{Cite journal | last = Lane | first = William C. | date = January 2010 | title = Leibniz's Best World Claim Restructured | url = http://apq.press.illinois.edu/47/1/lane.html | journal = American Philosophical Journal | volume = 47 | issue = 1 | pages = 57–84 | access-date = 9 March 2014 | archive-date = 8 May 2013 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130508204415/http://apq.press.illinois.edu/47/1/lane.html | url-status = dead }}</ref>{{rp|76–77}}

==Related issues==
Philip Irving Mitchell, Director of the University Honors Program at Dallas Baptist University, offers a list of what he refers to as issues that are not strictly part of the problem of evil yet are related to it:
* ''Evil and the Demonic'': Mitchell writes that, given the belief in supernatural powers among all three monotheistic faiths, what do these beliefs have to do with evil?
* ''The Politics of Theodicy'': Does explaining the causes of evil and suffering serve as a justification for oppression by the powerful or the liberation of the powerless? <ref name="Peter L. Berger"/>{{rp|59}}
* ''Horrific Evil'': The Holocaust, child abuse and rape, extreme schizophrenia, torture, mass genocide, etc. Should one even speak of justification before such atrocities? What hope of restoration and healing can be given to survivors?
* ''The Judgment of God'': Many theodical discussions focus on "innocent" suffering and experiences of profound evil, while ignoring wrongs common to individuals, ideas, belief systems, and social structures. Can evil be understood as God's judgment upon sin and evil?
* ''The Hiddenness of God'': The divine hiddenness of God (deus absconditus) is sometimes considered a subset of theodicy. Why does God often seem not to openly, visibly respond to evil (or good) in an indisputable way?
* ''Metaphysical Evil'': What exactly is evil? What is its origin and essence?<ref name="Mitchell"/>

===The existential problem of evil===
The existential problem asks, in what way does the experience of suffering speak to issues of theodicy and in what way does theodicy hurt or help with the experience of suffering? Dan Allender and Tremper Longman point out that suffering creates internal questions about God that go beyond the philosophical, such as: does God, or anyone, care about what I am suffering every day?<ref>Allender, Dan and Tremper Longman III. ''The Cry of the Soul: How Our Emotions Reveal Our Deepest Questions About God''. Colorado Springs: NavPress, 1999. {{ISBN?}}</ref>{{rp|24, 45, 135}}

===Literature and the arts===
Mitchell says that literature surrounding the problem of evil offers a mixture of both universal application and particular dramatization of specific instances, fictional and non-fictional, with religious and secular views. Works such as '']'' by ]; '']'' by ]; '']'' by ]; '']'' by ]; '']'' by ]; "]" by ]; '']'' by ]; '']'' by ]; ] by ]; '']'' by ]; ''Holy the Firm'' and ''For the Time Being'' by ]; and '']'' by ] offer insights for how the problem of evil may be understood.<ref name="Mitchell"/><ref>{{cite journal |last=Styler |first=Rebecca |title=The Problem of 'Evil' in Elizabeth Gaskell's Gothic Tales |journal=Gothic Studies |year=2010 |volume=12 |issue=1 |pages=33–50 |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |doi=10.7227/GS.12.1.4 | url=https://www.euppublishing.com/doi/pdfplus/10.7227/GS.12.1.4 }}</ref><ref name="Peter Kivy"/>

While artist Cornelia van Voorst first declares that, "artists do not think of the world in terms of good and bad, but more in terms of: What can we make of this?", she also offers the example of ]'s 1935 etching ''Minotauromachie'', currently at the ], where a little girl holds up her small shining light to confront and face down the evil Minotaur of war.<ref name="Cornelia van Voorst">{{cite web |last=van Voorst |first=Cornelia |title=Art and the nature of good and evil |url=https://www.abc.net.au/religion/art-and-the-nature-of-good-and-evil/10901112 |date= 14 March 2019 |publisher=ABC Religion & Ethics |access-date=19 April 2021}}</ref> Franziska Reiniger says art depicting the overwhelming evil of the Holocaust has become controversial. The painting of Lola Lieber-Schwarz – ''The Murder of Matilda Lieber, Her Daughters Lola and Berta, and Berta's Children Itche (Yitzhak) and Marilka, January 1942'' – depicts a family lying dead on the snowy ground outside a village with a Nazi and his dog walking away from the scene. His face is not visible. The scene is cold and dead, with only the perpetrator and maybe one of his victims, a child clinging to its mother, still remaining alive. No one knows who was there to witness this event or what their relationship to these events might have been, but the art itself is a depiction of the problem of evil.<ref name="Franziska Reiniger">{{cite web|last =Reiniger| first=Franziska|title=Are There Boundaries to Artistic Representations of the Holocaust? |url=https://www.yadvashem.org/articles/general/boundaries-to-artistic-representations-of-the-holocaust.html| publisher= Yad Vashem. The World Holocaust Remembrance Center |access-date=19 April 2021}}</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
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==Notes and references== ==Notes and references==

;Notes
===Notes===
{{Reflist|group=n}}
{{Reflist|group=note}}
;References

{{Reflist|2}}
===References===
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{notelist}}


== Further reading == == Further reading ==
* ] and ], eds (1990). ''The Problem of Evil''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. The standard anthology in English. Contains classic papers by recent philosophers of religion in the analytic tradition. Deals with both the logical problem and the evidential problem.
* Adams, Marilyn McCord. "Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God." Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1999.
* Adams, Marilyn McCord (1999). ''Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God'', Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
* Adams, Marilyn McCord and ], eds. "The Problem of Evil". Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990. The standard anthology in English. Contains classic papers by recent philosophers of religion in the analytic tradition. Deals with both the logical problem and the evidential problem.
* Adams, Robert M. "Must God Create the Best?" in "The Virtue of Faith and Other Essays in Philosophical Theology". New York: Oxford University Press, 1987. * Adams, Robert M (1987). "Must God Create the Best?" in ''The Virtue of Faith and Other Essays in Philosophical Theology'', New York: Oxford University Press.
* Adams, Robert M. "Existence, Self-Interest and the Problem of Evil" in "The Virtue of Faith and Other Essays in Philosophical Theology". New York: Oxford University Press, 1987. * Adams, Robert M (1987). "Existence, Self-Interest and the Problem of Evil" in ''The Virtue of Faith and Other Essays in Philosophical Theology'', New York: Oxford University Press.
* ]. ''On Evil'' (''De Malo''), trans. Regan; ed. Brian Davies. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2003. * ] (2003). ''On Evil'' (''De Malo''), trans. Regan; ed. Brian Davies. Oxford, Oxford University Press.
* {{Cite book | last = Beebe | first = James R. | year = 2006 | contribution = The Logical Problem of Evil | editor-last = Fieser | editor-first = James | editor2-last = Bradley | editor2-first = Dowden | title = The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy | contribution-url = https://www.iep.utm.edu/e/evil-log.htm }}
* {{Cite book
* {{cite book|last=Boyd|first=Gregory A.|author-link = Greg Boyd (theologian)|title=Is God to Blame?|year=2003|publisher=InterVarsity Press|isbn=978-0-8308-2394-9}}
| last = Beebe
* ], ed. (2024). ''Religion and the Problem of Evil, & '', Review of Ecumenical Studies.
| first = James R.
* ] (1908). "The Economic Basis of the Problem of Evil," ''Harvard Theological Review'', 1(1), pp. –
| author-link =
* ]. '']'', 1881. Chapters "Rebellion" and "]"
| year = 2006
| contribution = The Logical Problem of Evil
| editor-last = Fieser
| editor-first = James
| editor2-last = Bradley
| editor2-first = Dowden
| title = The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
| contribution-url = http://www.iep.utm.edu/e/evil-log.htm
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Boyd
|first=Gregory A.
|title=Is God to Blame?
|year=2003
|publisher=InterVarsity Press
|isbn=0-8308-2394-8
}}
*Brown, Paterson. , ''Mind'', 1963.
*Brown, Paterson. , ''Mind'', 1964.
*Brown, Paterson. , ''Religious Studies'', 1967.
* Carver Thomas N. 1908. "The Economic Basis of the Problem of Evil," ''Harvard Theological Review'', 1(1), pp. -
* {{Cite journal
| last = Farrer
| first = Austin
| author-link = Austin Farrer
| title = Love Almighty and Ills Unlimited
| publisher=Doubleday
| place = Garden City, NY
| year = 1961
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
* Dostoevsky, Fyodor. '']'', 1881. Chapters "Rebellion" and "]"
* {{Cite book
| last = Haught
| first = James A.
| author-link =
| title = 2,000 Years of Disbelief: Famous People with the Courage to Doubt
| publisher=Prometheus Books
| place = Amherst, N.Y.
| year = 1996
| isbn = 1-57392-067-3
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* {{Cite book
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| title = Evil and the God of Love
| publisher=Macmillan
| place = London
| year = 1966
| isbn = 978-0-06-063902-0
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
* Howard-Snyder, Daniel, ed. ''The Evidential Problem of Evil''. Bloomington and Indianapolis, IN: Indian University Press, 1996. Probably the best collection of essays in English on the evidential argument from evil. Includes most of the major players on the topic. * Howard-Snyder, Daniel, ed. ''The Evidential Problem of Evil''. Bloomington and Indianapolis, IN: Indian University Press, 1996. Probably the best collection of essays in English on the evidential argument from evil. Includes most of the major players on the topic.
* {{Cite book | last = Mackie | first = J. L. | author-link = J. L. Mackie | title = The Miracle of Theism | publisher=Oxford University Press | place = Oxford | year = 1982
* {{Cite book
| last = Mackie | isbn = 978-0-06-063902-0 }}
* ] (2024), "," in ] (ed.) ''Religion and the Problem of Evil, RES.''
| first = J. L.
* ] (1980). ''Dialogues on Natural Religion'' (Parts X and XI), ed. Richard Pokin. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett.
| author-link = J. L. Mackie
* Kanterian, Edward (2024), "", in ] (ed.) ''Religion and the Problem of Evil, RES.''
| title = The Miracle of Theism
* ]. (1710). '']''.
| publisher=Oxford University Press
* Leibniz, Gottfried. (1765). "A Vindication of God's Justice...", ("Causa Dei") trans. Paul Schrecker and Anne Martin Schrecker. New York: MacMillan, 1965.
| place = Oxford
* {{Cite book | last = Murray | first = Michael | year = 1998 | contribution = Leibniz on the Problem of Evil | editor-last = Zalta | editor-first = Edward N
| year = 1982
| editor-link = Edward N. Zalta | title = The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy | contribution-url = https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/leibniz-evil/ }}
| isbn = 978-0-06-063902-0
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}}
* {{Cite book | last = Plantinga | first = Alvin | author-link = Alvin Plantinga | title = The Nature of Necessity | publisher=Clarendon Press | place = Oxford | year = 1974
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* ] von. ''Theodicy''.
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* Leibniz, G. W. von. "A Vindication of God's Justice...", ("Causa Dei") trans. Paul Schrecker and Anne Martin Schrecker. New York: MacMillan, 1965.
* ] (1990). "The Problem of Evil and Some Varieties of Atheism" in ''The Problem of Evil'', ed. Marilyn McCord Adams and Robert M. Adams. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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| first = Michael
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* {{Cite book | last = Tooley | first = Michael | author-link = Michael Tooley | year = 2002 | contribution = The Problem of Evil | editor-last = Zalta | editor-first = Edward N. | editor-link = Edward N. Zalta | title = The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy | contribution-url = https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/evil/ }}
| year = 1998
* {{Cite book | last = Trakakis | first = Nick | author-link = Nick Trakakis | year = 2006 | contribution = Evidential Problem of Evil | editor-last = Fieser | editor-first = James | editor2-last = Bradley | editor2-first = Dowden | title = The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy | contribution-url = https://www.iep.utm.edu/e/evil-evi.htm }}
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| title = The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
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| contribution-url = http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/leibniz-evil/
* {{cite book|title = A History of the Dvaita School of Vedānta and Its Literature, 3rd Edition|first = B. N. Krishnamurti| last = Sharma| publisher=Motilal Banarsidass (2008 Reprint) |isbn = 978-8120815759| year= 2000 }}
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* {{cite journal| title= Is Jesus a Hindu? S.C. Vasu and Multiple Madhva Misrepresentations|first= Deepak| last= Sarma| journal= Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies| year= 2000| volume = 13| doi=10.7825/2164-6279.1228 | doi-access= free}}
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* {{cite book| title= Epistemologies and the Limitations of Philosophical Enquiry: Doctrine in Madhva Vedanta|first= Deepak| last= Sarma| publisher= Routledge| year= 2005}}
* Ormsby, Eric. ''Theodicy in Islamic Thought'' (], 1984)
* ]. (1759) '']''. Many editions. Voltaire's caustic response to Leibniz' doctrine that this is the best possible world.
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| author-link = Stephen Palmquist
| title = Kant's Critical Religion
| publisher=Ashgate
| place = Aldershot, England
| year = 2000
| isbn = 0-7546-1333-X
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
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| first = Alvin
| author-link = Alvin Plantinga
| title = God, Freedom, and Evil
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| year = 1977
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| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
* {{Cite book
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| first = Alvin
| author-link = Alvin Plantinga
| title = The Nature of Necessity
| publisher=Clarendon Press
| place = Oxford
| year = 1974
| isbn = 978-0-19-824414-1
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
* Rowe, William. "The Problem of Evil and Some Varieties of Atheism" in ''The Problem of Evil'', ed. Marilyn McCord Adams and Robert M. Adams. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990.
* Stewart, Matthew. ''The Courtier and the Heretic: Leibniz, Spinoza and the Fate of God in the Modern World''. W.W. Norton, 2005.
* {{Cite book
| last = Swinburne
| first = Richard
| author-link = Richard Swinburne
| title = The Coherence of Theism
| publisher=Clarendon Press
| place = Oxford
| year = 1997
| isbn = 978-0-19-824070-9
| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
* Swinburne, Richard. ''Providence and the Problem of Evil''. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.
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| year = 2002
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| editor-last = Zalta
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| editor-link = Edward N. Zalta
| title = The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
| contribution-url = http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/evil/
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}}
* {{Cite book
| last = Trakakis
| first = Nick
| author-link = Nick Trakakis
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| contribution = Evidential Problem of Evil
| editor-last = Fieser
| editor-first = James
| editor2-last = Bradley
| editor2-first = Dowden
| title = The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
| contribution-url = http://www.iep.utm.edu/e/evil-evi.htm
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}}
* Van Inwagen, Peter. ''The Problem of Evil''. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.
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| first1 = William McF.
| last1 = Wilson
| author1-link =
| first2 = Julian N.
| last2 = Hartt
| author2-link =
| chapter = Farrer's Theodicy
| pages = 100–118
| editor1-last = Hein
| editor1-first = David
| editor1-link =
| editor2-last = Henderson
| editor2-first = Edward
| editor2-link =
| title = Captured by the Crucified: The Practical Theology of Austin Farrer
| publisher=T & T Clark International
| place = New York
| year = 2004
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| ref = harv
| postscript = <!--None-->
}}
* ]. ''Candide''. Many editions. Voltaire's caustic response to Leibniz' doctrine that this is the best possible world.


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category}}
* {{cite web |url=http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/nicholas_tattersall/evil.html |title=The Evidential Argument from Evil |accessdate=12 April 2007 |last=Tattersall |first=Nicholas |year=1998 |work=Secular Web Library |publisher=]}}
* {{cite web |url=http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/nicholas_tattersall/evil.html |title=The Evidential Argument from Evil |access-date=12 April 2007 |last=Tattersall |first=Nicholas |year=1998 |work=Secular Web Library |publisher=]}}
*
*
* , Appendix VI of , by Stephen Palmquist. * , Appendix VI of , by Stephen Palmquist.


=== Encyclopedias === === Encyclopedias ===
* {{iep|e/evil-log.htm|The Logical Problem of Evil}} * {{cite IEP |url-id=e/evil-log.htm |title=The Logical Problem of Evil}}
* {{iep|e/evil-evi.htm|The Evidential Problem of Evil}} * {{cite IEP |url-id=e/evil-evi.htm |title=The Evidential Problem of Evil}}
* {{Sep|evil|The Problem of Evil}} * {{cite IEP |url-id=e/humeevil.htm |title=Humean Arguments from Evil}}
* {{Sep entry|leibniz-evil/|Leibniz on the Problem of Evil}} * {{cite SEP |url-id=evil |title=The Problem of Evil}}
* {{cite SEP |url-id=leibniz-evil/ |title=Leibniz on the Problem of Evil}}
*
*


{{Hamartiology}} {{Ethics}}
{{Philosophy of religion}}
{{ethics}}
{{philosophy of religion}} {{Good and evil}}
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Latest revision as of 15:05, 7 January 2025

Reconciling the existence of evil with an all-good and all-powerful God

Part of a series on the
Philosophy of religion
Religious concepts
Challenges
Problem of evil
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The problem of evil is the philosophical question of how to reconcile the existence of evil and suffering with an omnipotent, omnibenevolent, and omniscient God. There are currently differing definitions of these concepts. The best known presentation of the problem is attributed to the Greek philosopher Epicurus. It was popularized by David Hume.

Besides the philosophy of religion, the problem of evil is also important to the fields of theology and ethics. There are also many discussions of evil and associated problems in other philosophical fields, such as secular ethics, and evolutionary ethics. But as usually understood, the problem of evil is posed in a theological context.

Responses to the problem of evil have traditionally been in three types: refutations, defenses, and theodicies.

The problem of evil is generally formulated in two forms: the logical problem of evil and the evidential problem of evil. The logical form of the argument tries to show a logical impossibility in the coexistence of a god and evil, while the evidential form tries to show that given the evil in the world, it is improbable that there is an omnipotent, omniscient, and a wholly good god. Concerning the evidential problem, many theodicies have been proposed. One accepted theodicy is to appeal to the strong account of the compensation theodicy. This view holds that the primary benefit of evils, in addition to their compensation in the afterlife, can reject the evidential problem of evil. The problem of evil has been extended to non-human life forms, to include suffering of non-human animal species from natural evils and human cruelty against them.

According to scholars, most philosophers see the logical problem of evil as having been fully rebutted by various defenses.

Definitions

Evil

A broad concept of evil defines it as any and all pain and suffering, yet this definition quickly becomes problematic. Marcus Singer says that a usable definition of evil must be based on the knowledge that: "If something is really evil, it can't be necessary, and if it is really necessary, it can't be evil". According to philosopher John Kemp, evil cannot be correctly understood on "a simple hedonic scale on which pleasure appears as a plus, and pain as a minus". The National Institute of Medicine says pain is essential for survival: "Without pain, the world would be an impossibly dangerous place".

While many of the arguments against an omni-God are based on the broadest definition of evil, "most contemporary philosophers interested in the nature of evil are primarily concerned with evil in a narrower sense". The narrow concept of evil involves moral condemnation, and is applicable only to moral agents capable of making independent decisions, and their actions; it allows for the existence of some pain and suffering without identifying it as evil. Christianity is based on "the salvific value of suffering".

Philosopher Eve Garrard suggests that the term evil cannot be used to describe ordinary wrongdoing, because "there is a qualitative and not merely a quantitative difference between evil acts and other wrongful ones; evil acts are not just very bad or wrongful acts, but rather ones possessing some specially horrific quality". Calder argues that evil must involve the attempt or desire to inflict significant harm on the victim without moral justification.

Evil takes on different meanings when seen from the perspective of different belief systems, and while evil can be viewed in religious terms, it can also be understood in natural or secular terms, such as social vice, egoism, criminality, and sociopathology. John Kekes writes that an action is evil if "(1) it causes grievous harm to (2) innocent victims, and it is (3) deliberate, (4) malevolently motivated, and (5) morally unjustifiable".

Omni-qualities

Omniscience is "maximal knowledge". According to Edward Wierenga, a classics scholar and doctor of philosophy and religion at the University of Massachusetts, maximal is not unlimited but limited to "God knowing what is knowable". This is the most widely accepted view of omniscience among scholars of the twenty-first century, and is what William Hasker calls freewill-theism. Within this view, future events that depend upon choices made by individuals with free will are unknowable until they occur.

Omnipotence is maximal power to bring about events within the limits of possibility, but again maximal is not unlimited. According to the philosophers Hoffman and Rosenkrantz: "An omnipotent agent is not required to bring about an impossible state of affairs... maximal power has logical and temporal limitations, including the limitation that an omnipotent agent cannot bring about, i.e., cause, another agent's free decision".

Omnibenevolence sees God as all-loving. If God is omnibenevolent, he acts according to what is best, but if there is no best available, God attempts, if possible, to bring about states of affairs that are creatable and are optimal within the limitations of physical reality.

Defenses and theodicies

Responses to the problem of evil have occasionally been classified as defences or theodicies although authors disagree on the exact definitions. Generally, a defense refers to attempts to address the logical argument of evil that says "it is logically impossible – not just unlikely – that God exists". A defense does not require a full explanation of evil, and it need not be true, or even probable; it need only be possible, since possibility invalidates the logic of impossibility.

A theodicy, on the other hand, is more ambitious, since it attempts to provide a plausible justification – a morally or philosophically sufficient reason – for the existence of evil. This is intended to weaken the evidential argument which uses the reality of evil to argue that the existence of God is unlikely.

Secularism

In philosopher Forrest E. Baird's view, one can have a secular problem of evil whenever humans seek to explain why evil exists and its relationship to the world. He adds that any experience that "calls into question our basic trust in the order and structure of our world" can be seen as evil, therefore, according to Peter L. Berger, humans need explanations of evil "for social structures to stay themselves against chaotic forces".

Formulation

Further information: Existence of God

The problem of evil refers to the challenge of reconciling the existence of evil and suffering with our view of the world, especially but not exclusively, with belief in an omnipotent, omnibenevolent, and omniscient God who acts in the world.

The problem of evil may be described either experientially or theoretically. The experiential problem is the difficulty in believing in a concept of a loving God when confronted by evil and suffering in the real world, such as from epidemics, or wars, or murder, or natural disasters where innocent people become victims. Theoretically, the problem is usually described and studied by religion scholars in two varieties: the logical problem and the evidential problem.

One of the earliest statements of the problem is found in early Buddhist texts. In the Majjhima Nikāya, the Buddha (6th or 5th century BCE) states that if a God created sentient beings, then due to the pain and suffering they feel, he is likely to be an evil God.

Logical problem of evil

The earliest statement of the problem of evil is attributed to Epicurus, but this is uncertain.

The problem of evil possibly originates from the Greek philosopher Epicurus (341–270 BCE). Hume summarizes Epicurus's version of the problem as follows: "Is willing to prevent evil, but not able? then is he impotent. Is he able, but not willing? then is he malevolent. Is he both able and willing? whence then is evil?"

The logical argument from evil is as follows:

P1. If an omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient god exists, then evil does not.

P2. There is evil in the world.

C1. Therefore, an omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient god does not exist.

This argument is of the form modus tollens: if its premise (P1) is true, the conclusion (C1) follows of necessity. To show that the first premise is plausible, subsequent versions tend to expand on it, such as this modern example:

P1a. God exists.

P1b. God is omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient.

P1c. An omnipotent being has the power to prevent that evil from coming into existence.

P1d. An omnibenevolent being would want to prevent all evils.

P1e. An omniscient being knows every way in which evils can come into existence, and knows every way in which those evils could be prevented.

P1f. A being who knows every way in which an evil can come into existence, who is able to prevent that evil from coming into existence, and who wants to do so, would prevent the existence of that evil.

P1. If there exists an omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient God, then no evil exists.

P2. Evil exists (logical contradiction).

Both of these arguments are understood to be presenting two forms of the 'logical' problem of evil. They attempt to show that the assumed premises lead to a logical contradiction that cannot all be correct. Most philosophical debate has focused on the suggestion that God would want to prevent all evils and therefore cannot coexist with any evils (premises P1d and P1f), but there are existing responses to every premise (such as Plantinga's response to P1c), with defenders of theism (for example, St. Augustine and Leibniz) arguing that God could exist and allow evil if there were good reasons.

If God lacks any one of these qualities – omniscience, omnipotence, or omnibenevolence – then the logical problem of evil can be resolved. Process theology and open theism are modern positions that limit God's omnipotence or omniscience (as defined in traditional theology) based on free will in others.

Evidential problem of evil

The evidential problem of evil (also referred to as the probabilistic or inductive version of the problem) seeks to show that the existence of evil, although logically consistent with the existence of God, counts against or lowers the probability of the truth of theism. Both absolute versions and relative versions of the evidential problems of evil are presented below.

A version by William L. Rowe:

  1. There exist instances of intense suffering which an omnipotent, omniscient being could have prevented without thereby losing some greater good or permitting some evil equally bad or worse.
  2. An omniscient, wholly good being would prevent the occurrence of any intense suffering it could, unless it could not do so without thereby losing some greater good or permitting some evil equally bad or worse.
  3. (Therefore) There does not exist an omnipotent, omniscient, wholly good being.

Another by Paul Draper:

  1. Gratuitous evils exist.
  2. The hypothesis of indifference, i.e., that if there are supernatural beings they are indifferent to gratuitous evils, is a better explanation for (1) than theism.
  3. Therefore, evidence prefers that no god, as commonly understood by theists, exists.

Skeptical theism is an example of a theistic challenge to the premises in these arguments.

Problem of evil and animal suffering

See also: Wild animal suffering, Predation problem, and Evolutionary theodicy
William L. Rowe's example of natural evil: "In some distant forest lightning strikes a dead tree, resulting in a forest fire. In the fire a fawn is trapped, horribly burned, and lies in terrible agony for several days before death relieves its suffering." Rowe also cites the example of human evil where an innocent child is a victim of violence and thereby suffers.

The problem of evil has also been extended beyond human suffering, to include suffering of animals from cruelty, disease and evil. One version of this problem includes animal suffering from natural evil, such as the violence and fear faced by animals from predators, natural disasters, over the history of evolution. This is also referred to as the Darwinian problem of evil, after Charles Darwin who wrote in 1856: "What a book a Devil's chaplain might write on the clumsy, wasteful, blundering low & horridly cruel works of nature!", and in his later autobiography said: "A being so powerful and so full of knowledge as a God who could create the universe, is to our finite minds omnipotent and omniscient, and it revolts our understanding to suppose that his benevolence is not unbounded, for what advantage can there be in the sufferings of millions of the lower animals throughout almost endless time? This very old argument from the existence of suffering against the existence of an intelligent first cause seems to me a strong one".

The second version of the problem of evil applied to animals, and avoidable suffering experienced by them, is one caused by some human beings, such as from animal cruelty or when they are shot or slaughtered. This version of the problem of evil has been used by scholars including John Hick to counter the responses and defenses to the problem of evil such as suffering being a means to perfect the morals and greater good because animals are innocent, helpless, amoral but sentient victims. Scholar Michael Almeida said this was "perhaps the most serious and difficult" version of the problem of evil. The problem of evil in the context of animal suffering, states Almeida, can be stated as:

  1. God is omnipotent, omniscient and wholly good.
  2. The evil of extensive animal suffering exists.
  3. Necessarily, God can actualize an evolutionary perfect world.
  4. Necessarily, God can actualize an evolutionary perfect world only if God does actualize an evolutionary perfect world.
  5. Necessarily, God actualized an evolutionary perfect world.
  6. If #1 is true then either #2 or #5 is true, but not both. This is a contradiction, so #1 is not true.

Secular responses

While the problem of evil is usually considered to be a theistic one, Peter Kivy says there is a secular problem of evil that exists even if one gives up belief in a deity; that is, the problem of how it is possible to reconcile "the pain and suffering human beings inflict upon one another". Kivy writes that all but the most extreme moral skeptics agree that humans have a duty to not knowingly harm others. This leads to the secular problem of evil when one person injures another through "unmotivated malice" with no apparent rational explanation or justifiable self-interest.

There are two main reasons used to explain evil, but according to Kivy, neither are fully satisfactory. The first explanation is psychological egoism – that everything humans do is from self-interest. Bishop Butler has countered this asserting pluralism: human beings are motivated by self-interest, but they are also motivated by particulars – that is particular objects, goals or desires – that may or may not involve self-interest but are motives in and of themselves and may, occasionally, include genuine benevolence. For the egoist, "man's inhumanity to man" is "not explainable in rational terms", for if humans can be ruthless for ruthlessness' sake, then egoism is not the only human motive. Pluralists do not fare better simply by recognizing three motives: injuring another for one of those motives could be interpreted as rational, but hurting for the sake of hurting, is as irrational to the pluralist as the egoist.

Amélie Rorty offers a few examples of secular responses to the problem of evil:

Evil as necessary

According to Michel de Montaigne and Voltaire, while character traits such as wanton cruelty, partiality and egoism are an innate part of the human condition, these vices serve the "common good" of the social process. For Montaigne, the idea of evil is relative to the limited knowledge of human beings, not to the world itself or to God. He adopts what philosophers Graham Oppy and N. N. Trakakis refer to as a "neo-Stoic view of an orderly world" where everything is in its place.

This secular version of the early coherentist response to the problem of evil, (coherentism asserts that acceptable belief must be part of a coherent system), can be found, according to Rorty, in the writings of Bernard de Mandeville and Sigmund Freud. Mandeville says that when vices like greed and envy are suitably regulated within the social sphere, they are what "spark the energy and productivity that make progressive civilization possible". Rorty asserts that the guiding motto of both religious and secular coherentists is: 'Look for the benefits gained by harm and you will find they outweigh the damage'."

Economic theorist Thomas Malthus stated in a 1798 essay on the question of population over-crowding, its impact on food availability, and food's impact on population through famine and death, that it was: "Necessity, that imperious, all pervading law of nature, restrains them within the prescribed bounds  and man cannot by any means of reason escape from it". He adds: "Nature will not, indeed cannot be defeated in her purposes." According to Malthus, nature and the God of nature, cannot be seen as evil in this natural and necessary process.

Evil as the absence of good

Main article: Absence of good

Paul Elmer More says that, to Plato, evil resulted from the human failure to pay sufficient attention to finding and doing good: evil is an absence of good where good should be. More says Plato directed his entire educational program against the "innate indolence of the will" and the neglect of a search for ethical motives "which are the true springs of our life". Plato asserted that it is the innate laziness, ignorance and lack of attention to pursuing good that, in the beginning, leads humans to fall into "the first lie, of the soul" that then often leads to self-indulgence and evil. According to Joseph Kelly, Clement of Alexandria, a neo-Platonist in the 2nd-century, adopted Plato's view of evil. The fourth-century theologian Augustine of Hippo also adopted Plato's view. In his Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Love, Augustine maintained that evil exists as an "absence of the good".

Schopenhauer emphasized the existence of evil and its negation of the good. Therefore, according to Mesgari Akbar and Akbari Mohsen, he was a pessimist. He defined the "good" as coordination between an individual object and a definite effort of the will, and he defined evil as the absence of such coordination.

Arguably, Hannah Arendt's presentation of the Eichmann Trial as an exemplar of "the banality of evil"--consisting of a lack of empathic imagination, coupled with thoughtless conformity--is a variation on Augustine's theodicy.

Deny problem exists

Theophrastus, the Greek Peripatetic philosopher and author of Characters, a work that explores the moral weaknesses and strengths of 30 personality types in the Greece of his day, thought that the nature of 'being' comes from, and consists of, contraries, such as eternal and perishable, order and chaos, good and evil; the role of evil is thereby limited, he said, since it is only a part of the whole which is overall, good. According to Theophrastus, a world focused on virtue and vice was a naturalistic social world where the overall goodness of the universe as a whole included, of necessity, both good and evil, rendering the problem of evil non-existent.

David Hume traced what he asserted as the psychological origins of virtue but not the vices. Rorty says: "He dispels the superstitious remnants of a Manichean battle: the forces of good and evil warring in the will"; concluding instead that human beings project their own subjective disapproval onto events and actions.

Evil as illusory

A modern version of this view is found in Christian Science which asserts that evils such as suffering and disease only appear to be real but, in truth, are illusions. The theologians of Christian Science, states Stephen Gottschalk, posit that the Spirit is of infinite might; mortal human beings fail to grasp this and focus instead on evil and suffering that have no real existence as "a power, person or principle opposed to God".

The illusion theodicy has been critiqued for denying the reality of crimes, wars, terror, sickness, injury, death, suffering and pain to the victim. Further, adds Millard Erickson, the illusion argument merely shifts the problem to a new problem, as to why God would create this "illusion" of crimes, wars, terror, sickness, injury, death, suffering and pain; and why God does not stop this "illusion".

Moral rationalism

"In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries rationalism about morality was repeatedly used to reject strong divine command theories of ethics". Such moral rationalism asserts that morality is based on reason. Rorty refers to Immanuel Kant as an example of a "pious rationalist". According to Shaun Nichols, "The Kantian approach to moral philosophy is to try to show that ethics is based on practical reason". The problem of evil then becomes, "how possible for a rational being of good will to be immoral".

Kant wrote an essay on theodicy criticizing it for attempting too much without recognizing the limits of human reason. Kant did not think he had exhausted all possible theodicies, but did assert that any successful one must be based on nature rather than philosophy. While a successful philosophical theodicy had not been achieved in his time, added Kant, he asserted there was no basis for a successful anti-theodicy either.

Evil God challenge

One resolution to the problem of evil is that God is not good. The evil God challenge thought experiment explores whether an evil God is as likely to exist as a good God. Dystheism is the belief that God is not wholly good. Maltheism is the belief in an evil god.

Peter Forrest has stated:

The anti-God that I take seriously is the malicious omnipotent omniscient being, who, it is said, creates so that creatures will suffer, because of the joy this suffering gives It. This may be contrasted with a different idea of anti-God, that of an evil being that seeks to destroy things of value out of hatred or envy. An omnipotent, omniscient being would not be envious. Moreover, destructive hatred cannot motivate creation. For these two reasons I find that rather implausible. My case holds, however, against that sort of anti-God as well as the malicious one. The variety of anti-Gods alerts us to the problem of positing any character to God, whether benign, indifferent, or malicious. There are many such character traits we could hypothesize. Why not a God who creates as a jest? Or a God who loves drama? Or a God who, adapting Haldane's quip, is fond of beetles? Or, more seriously, a God who just loves creating regardless of the joy or suffering of creatures?

Catholic Response

The Catholic Church believes good things include power and knowledge, and that only the misuse of power and knowledge is evil. Consequently, the church believes God could not be evil or become evil if he is omnipotent and omniscient, since these qualities spring from omnibenevolence. As the Roman Catechism puts it:

For by acknowledging God to be omnipotent, we also of necessity acknowledge Him to be omniscient, and to hold all things in subjection to His supreme authority and dominion. When we do not doubt that He is omnipotent, we must be also convinced of everything else regarding Him, the absence of which would render His omnipotence altogether unintelligible. Besides, nothing tends more to confirm our faith and animate our hope than a deep conviction that all things are possible to God; for whatever may be afterwards proposed as an object of faith, however great, however wonderful, however raised above the natural order, is easily and without hesitation believed, once the mind has grasped the knowledge of the omnipotence of God. Nay more, the greater the truths which the divine oracles announce, the more willingly does the mind deem them worthy of belief. And should we expect any favour from heaven, we are not discouraged by the greatness of the desired benefit, but are cheered and confirmed by frequently considering that there is nothing which an omnipotent God cannot effect.

Disavowal of theodicy

This position argues from a number of different directions that the theodicy project is objectionable. Toby Betenson writes that the central theme of all anti-theodicies is that: "Theodicies mediate a praxis that sanctions evil". A theodicy may harmonize God with the existence of evil, but it can be said that it does so at the cost of nullifying morality. Most theodicies assume that whatever evil there is exists for the sake of some greater good. However, if that is so, then it appears humans have no duty to prevent it, for in preventing evil they would also prevent the greater good for which the evil is required. Even worse, it seems that any action can be rationalized, for if one succeeds in performing an evil act, then God has permitted it, and so it must be for the greater good. From this line of thought one may conclude that, as these conclusions violate humanity's basic moral intuitions, no greater good theodicy is true, and God does not exist. Alternatively, one may point out that greater good theodicies lead humanity to see every conceivable state of affairs as compatible with the existence of God, and in that case the notion of God's goodness is rendered meaningless.

Betenson also says there is a "rich theological tradition of anti-theodicy". For many theists, there is no seamless theodicy that provides all answers, nor do 21st-century theologians think there should be. As Felix Christen, Fellow at Goethe University, Frankfurt, says, "When one considers human lives that have been shattered to the core, and, in the face of these tragedies the question 'Where is God?'  we would do well to stand with Nelly Sachs as she says, 'We really don't know'." Contemporary theodiceans, such as Alvin Plantinga, describe having doubts about the enterprise of theodicy "in the sense of providing an explanation of precise reasons why there is evil in the world". Plantinga's ultimate response to the problem of evil is that it is not a problem that can be solved. Christians simply cannot claim to know the answer to the "Why?" of evil. Plantinga stresses that this is why he does not proffer a theodicy but only a defense of the logic of theistic belief.

Atheistic viewpoint

From an atheistic viewpoint, the problem of evil is solved in accordance with the principle of Occam's razor: the existence of evil and suffering is reconciled with the assumption that an omnipotent, omnibenevolent, and omniscient God exists by assuming that no God exists.

David Hume's formulation of the problem of evil in Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion is this:

power we allow infinite: Whatever he wills is executed: But neither man nor any other animal are happy: Therefore he does not will their happiness. His wisdom is infinite: He is never mistaken in choosing the means to any end: But the course of nature tends not to human or animal felicity: Therefore it is not established for that purpose. Through the whole compass of human knowledge, there are no inferences more certain and infallible than these. In what respect, then, do his benevolence and mercy resemble the benevolence and mercy of men?

Theistic arguments

See also: Religious responses to the problem of evil

The problem of evil is acute for monotheistic religions such as Christianity, Islam, and Judaism that believe in a God who is omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent; but the question of why evil exists has also been studied in religions that are non-theistic or polytheistic, such as Buddhism, Hinduism, and Jainism. Excepting the classic primary response of suffering as redemptive as not being a full theodicy, John Hick writes that theism has traditionally responded to the problem within three main categories: the common freewill theodicy, the soul making theodicy, and the newer process theology.

Cruciform theodicy

Cruciform theodicy is not a full theodical system in the same manner that Soul-making theodicy and Process theodicy are, so it does not address all the questions of "the origin, nature, problem, reason and end of evil." It is, instead, a thematic trajectory. Historically, it has been and remains the primary Christian response to the problem of evil.

In cruciform theodicy, God is not a distant deity. In the person of Jesus, James Cone states that a suffering individual will find that God identifies himself "with the suffering of the world".

This theodicy sees incarnation as the "culmination of a series of things Divine love does to unite itself with material creation" to first share in that suffering and demonstrate empathy with it, and second to recognize its value and cost by redeeming it. This view asserts that an ontological change in the underlying structure of existence has taken place through the life and death of Jesus, with its immersion in human suffering, thereby transforming suffering itself. Philosopher and Christian priest Marilyn McCord Adams offers this as a theodicy of "redemptive suffering" in which personal suffering becomes an aspect of Christ's "transformative power of redemption" in the world. In this way, personal suffering does not only have value for one's self, it becomes an aspect of redeeming others.

For the individual, there is an alteration in the thinking of the believer as they come to see existence in this new light. For example, "On July 16, 1944 awaiting execution in a Nazi prison and reflecting on Christ's experience of powerlessness and pain, Dietrich Bonhoeffer penned six words that became the clarion call for the modern theological paradigm: 'Only the suffering God can help'."

This theodicy contains a special concern for the victims of the world, and stresses the importance of caring for those who suffer at the hands of injustice. Soelle says that Christ's willingness to suffer on behalf of others means that his followers must themselves serve as "God's representatives on earth" by struggling against evil and injustice and being willing to suffer for those on the "underside of history".

Animal suffering

Main articles: Wild animal suffering and Evolutionary theodicy

In response to arguments concerning natural evil and animal suffering, Christopher Southgate, a trained research biochemist and a Senior Lecturer of Theology and Religion at the University of Exeter, has developed a "compound evolutionary theodicy." Southgate uses three methods of analyzing good and harm to show how they are inseparable and create each other. First, he says evil is the consequence of the existence of good: free will is a good, but the same property also causes harm. Second, good is a goal that can only be developed through processes that include harm. Third, the existence of good is inherently and constitutively inseparable from the experience of harm or suffering.

Robert John Russell summarizes Southgate's theodicy as beginning with an assertion of the goodness of creation and all sentient creatures. Next Southgate argues that Darwinian evolution was the only way God could create such goodness. "A universe with the sort of beauty, diversity, sentience and sophistication of creatures that the biosphere now contains" could only come about by the natural processes of evolution. Michael Ruse points out that Richard Dawkins has made the same claim concerning evolution:

Dawkins  argues strenuously that selection and only selection can . No one – and presumably this includes God – could have gotten adaptive complexity without going the route of natural selection  The Christian positively welcomes Dawkins's understanding of Darwinism. Physical evil exists, and Darwinism explains why God had no choice but to allow it to occur. He wanted to produce design like effects (including humankind) and natural selection is the only option open.

According to Russell and Southgate, the goodness of creation is intrinsically linked to the evolutionary processes by which such goodness is achieved, and these processes, in turn, inevitably come with pain and suffering as intrinsic to them. In this scenario, natural evils are an inevitable consequence of developing life. Russell goes on to say that the physical laws that undergird biological development, such as thermodynamics, also contribute to "what is tragic" and "what is glorious" about life. "Gravity, geology, and the specific orbit of the moon lead to the tidal patterns of the Earth's oceans and thus to both the environment in which early life evolved and in which tsunamis bring death and destruction to countless thousands of people".

Holmes Rolston III says nature embodies 'redemptive suffering' as exemplified by Jesus. "The capacity to suffer through to joy is a supreme emergent and an essence of Christianity... The whole evolutionary upslope is a lesser calling of this kind". He calls it the 'cruciform creation' where life is constantly struggling through its pain and suffering toward something higher. Rolston says that within this process, there is no real waste as life and its components are "forever conserved, regenerated, redeemed".

Bethany N. Sollereder, Research Fellow at the Laudato Si' Research Institute at Campion Hall, specializes in theology concerning evolution; she writes that evolving life has become increasingly complex, skilled and interdependent. As it has become more intelligent and has increased its ability to relate emotionally, the capacity to suffer has also increased. Southgate describes this using Romans 8:22 which says "the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth" since its beginning. He says God responds to this reality by "co-suffering" with "every sentient being in creation".

Southgate's theodicy rejects any 'means to an end' argument that says the evolution of any species justifies the suffering and extinction of any prior species that led to it, and he affirms that "all creatures which have died, without their full potential having been realized, must be given fulfillment elsewhere". Russell asserts that the only satisfactory understanding of that "elsewhere" is the eschatological hope that the present creation will be transformed by God into the New Creation, with its new heaven and new earth.

Critique

Heaven

In what Russell describes as a "blistering attack by Wesley Wildman" on Southgate's theodicy, Wildman asserts that "if God really is to create a heavenly world of 'growth and change and relationality, yet no suffering', that world and not this world would be the best of all possible worlds, and a God that would not do so would be 'flagrantly morally inconsistent'."

Southgate has responded with what he calls an extension of the original argument: "that this evolutionary environment, full as it is of both competition and decay, is the only type of creation that can give rise to creaturely selves". That means "our guess must be that though heaven can eternally preserve those selves subsisting in suffering-free relationship, it could not give rise to them in the first place".

Randomness

Thomas F. Tracy offers a two-point critique: "The first is the problem of purpose: can evolutionary processes, in which chance plays so prominent a role, be understood as the context of God's purposive action? The second is the problem of the pervasiveness of suffering and death in evolution".

According to John Polkinghorne, the existence of chance does not negate the power and purposes of a Creator because "it is entirely possible that contingent processes can, in fact, lead to determined ends". But in Polkinghorne's theology, God is not a "Puppetmaster pulling every string", and his purposes are therefore general. Francisco J. Ayala adds that this means "God is not the explicit designer of each facet of evolution". For Polkinghorne, it is sufficient theologically to assume that "the emergence of some form of self-conscious, God-conscious being" was an aspect of divine purpose from the beginning whether God purposed humankind specifically or not.

Polkinghorne also links the existence of human freedom to the flexibility created by randomness in the quantum world. Richard W. Kropf asserts that free will has its origins in the "evolutionary ramifications" of the existence of chance as part of the process, thereby providing a "causal connection" between natural evil and the possibility of human freedom: one cannot exist without the other. Polkinghorne writes this means that "there is room for independent action in order for creatures to be themselves and "make themselves" in evolution, which therefore makes room for suffering and death.

A world in which creatures 'make themselves' can be held to be a greater good than a ready-made world would have been, but it has an inescapable cost. Evolutionary processes will not only yield great fruitfulness, but they will also necessarily involve ragged edges and blind alleys. Genetic mutation will not only produce new forms of life, but it will also result in malignancy. One cannot have the one without the other. The existence of cancer is an anguishing fact about creation but it is not gratuitous, something that a Creator who was a bit more competent or a bit less callous could easily have avoided. It is part of the shadow side of creative process... The more science helps us to understand the processes of the world, the more we see that the good and the bad are inextricably intertwined... It is all a package deal.

Other responses to animal suffering and natural evil

Others have argued:

  • That natural evils are the result of the fall of man, which corrupted the perfect world created by God. Theologian David Bentley Hart argues that "natural evil is the result of a world that's fallen into death" and says that "in Christian tradition, you don't just accept 'the world as it is'" but "you take 'the world as it is' as a broken, shadowy remnant of what it should have been." Hart's concept of the human fall, however, is an atemporal fall: "Obviously, wherever this departure from the divine happened, or whenever, it didn't happen within terrestrial history," and "this world, as we know it, from the Big Bang up until today, has been the world of death."
  • That forces of nature are neither "goods" nor "evils". They just are. Nature produces actions vital to some forms of life and lethal to others. Other life forms cause diseases, but for the disease, hosts provide food, shelter and a place to reproduce which are necessary things for life and are not by their nature evil.
  • That natural evils are the result of natural laws Williams points out that all the natural laws are necessary for life, and even death and natural disaster are necessary aspects of a developing universe.
  • That natural evils provide humanity with a knowledge of evil which makes their free choices more significant than they would otherwise be, and so their free will more valuable or
  • That natural evils are a mechanism of divine punishment for moral evils that humans have committed, and so the natural evil is justified.

Free will defense

Main article: Free will

The problem of evil is sometimes explained as a consequence of free will. Free will is a source of both good and of evil, since with free will comes the potential for abuse. People with free will make their own decisions to do wrong, states Gregory Boyd, and it is they who make that choice, not God. Further, the free will argument asserts that it would be logically inconsistent for God to prevent evil by coercion because then human will would no longer be free.

The key assumption underlying the free-will defense is that a world containing creatures who are significantly free is innately more valuable than one containing no free creatures. The sort of virtues and values that freedom makes possible – such as trust, love, charity, sympathy, tolerance, loyalty, kindness, forgiveness and friendship – are virtues that cannot exist as they are currently known and experienced without the freedom to choose them or not choose them. Augustine proffered a theodicy of freewill in the fourth century, but the contemporary version is best represented by Alvin Plantinga.

Plantinga offers a free will defense, instead of a theodicy, that began as a response to three assertions raised by J. L. Mackie. First, Mackie asserts "there is no possible world" in which the "essential" theistic beliefs Mackie describes can all be true. Either believers retain a set of inconsistent beliefs, or believers can give up "at least one of the 'essential propositions' of their faith". Second, there is Mackie's statement that an all powerful God, in creating the world, could have made "beings who would act freely, but always go right", and third is the question of what choices would have been logically available to such a God at creation.

Gottfried Leibniz

Plantinga built his response beginning with Gottfried Leibniz' assertion that there were innumerable possible worlds available to God before creation. Leibniz introduced the term theodicy in his 1710 work Essais de Théodicée sur la bonté de Dieu, la liberté de l'homme et l'origine du mal ("Theodicic Essays on the Benevolence of God, the Free will of man, and the Origin of Evil") where he argued that this is the best of all possible worlds that God could have created.

Plantinga says mankind lives in the actual world (the world God actualized), but that God could have chosen to create (actualize) any of the possibilities including those with moral good but no moral evil. The catch, Plantinga says, is that it is possible that factors within the possible worlds themselves prevented God from actualizing any of the worlds containing moral goodness and no moral evil. Plantinga refers to these factors as the nature of "human essences" and "transworld depravity".

Across the various possible worlds (transworld) are all the variations of possible humans, each with their own "human essence" (identity): core properties essential to each person that makes them who they are and distinguishes them from others. Every person is the instantiation of such an essence. This "transworld identity" varies in details but not in essence from world to world. This might include variations of a person (X) who always chooses right in some worlds. If somewhere, in some world, (X) ever freely chooses wrong, then the other possible worlds of only goodness could not be actualized and still leave (X) fully free. There might be numerous possible worlds which contained (X) doing only morally good things, but these would not be worlds that God could bring into being, because (X) would not be free in those worlds to make the wrong choice.

An all knowing God would know "in advance" that there are times when "no matter what circumstances" God places (X) in, as long as God leaves (X) free, (X) will make at least one bad choice. Plantinga terms this "transworld depravity". Therefore, if God wants (X) to be a part of creation, and free, then it could mean that the only option such a God would have would be to have an (X) who goes wrong at least once in a world where such wrong is possible. (X)'s free choice determined the world available for God to create.

"What is important about transworld depravity is that if a person suffers from it, then it wasn't within God's power to actualize any world in which that person is significantly free but does no wrong". Plantinga extends this to all human agents noting, "clearly it is possible that everybody suffers from transworld depravity". This means creating a world with moral good, no moral evil, and truly free persons was not an option available to God. The only way to have a world free of moral evil would be "by creating one without significantly free persons".

Critique

Most philosophers accept Plantinga's free-will defense and see the logical problem of evil as having been fully rebutted, according to Chad Meister, Robert Adams, and William Alston. William L. Rowe, in referring to Plantinga's argument, has written that "granted incompatibilism, there is a fairly compelling argument for the view that the existence of evil is logically consistent with the existence of the theistic God". In Arguing About Gods, Graham Oppy offers a dissent; while he acknowledges that "any philosophers seem to suppose that utterly demolishes the kinds of 'logical' arguments from evil developed by Mackie", he also says "I am not sure this is a correct assessment of the current state of play". Among contemporary philosophers, most discussion on the problem of evil currently revolves around the evidential problem of evil, namely that the existence of God is unlikely, rather than logically impossible.

Critics of the free will response have questioned whether it accounts for the degree of evil seen in this world. One point in this regard is that while the value of free will may be thought sufficient to counterbalance minor evils, it is less obvious that it outweighs the negative attributes of evils such as rape and murder. Another point is that those actions of free beings which bring about evil very often diminish the freedom of those who suffer the evil; for example the murder of a young child prevents the child from ever exercising their free will. In such a case the freedom of an innocent child is pitted against the freedom of the evil-doer, it is not clear why God would remain unresponsive and passive. Christopher Southgate asserts that a freewill defense cannot stand alone as sufficient to explain the abundance of situations where humans are deprived of freewill. It requires a secondary theory.

Another criticism is that the potential for evil inherent in free will may be limited by means which do not impinge on that free will. God could accomplish this by making moral actions especially pleasurable, or evil action and suffering impossible by allowing free will but not allowing the ability to enact evil or impose suffering. Supporters of the free will explanation state that would then no longer be free will. Critics respond that this view seems to imply it would be similarly wrong to try to reduce suffering and evil in these ways, a position which few would advocate.

Natural evil

A third challenge to the free will defence is natural evil, evil which is the result of natural causes (e.g. a child suffering from a disease, mass casualties from a volcano). Criticism of natural evil posits that even if for some reason an all-powerful and all-benevolent God tolerated evil human actions in order to allow free will, such a God would not be expected to also tolerate natural evils because they have no apparent connection to free will. Patricia A. Williams says differentiating between moral and natural evil is common but, in her view, unjustified. "Because human beings and their choices are part of nature, all evils are natural".

Advocates of the free will response propose various explanations of natural evils. Alvin Plantinga references Augustine of Hippo, writing of the possibility that natural evils could be caused by supernatural beings such as Satan. Plantinga emphasizes that it is not necessary that this be true, it is only necessary that this possibility be compatible with the argument from freewill. There are those who respond that Plantinga's freewill response might address moral evil but not natural evil. Some scholars, such as David Griffin, state that free will, or the assumption of greater good through free will, does not apply to animals. In contrast, a few scholars, while accepting that "free will" applies in a human context, have posited an alternative "free creatures" defense, stating that animals too benefit from their physical freedom though that comes with the cost of dangers they continuously face.

The "free creatures" defense has also been criticized, in the case of caged, domesticated and farmed animals who are not free and many of whom have historically experienced evil and suffering from abuse by their owners. Further, even animals and living creatures in the wild face horrendous evils and suffering – such as burns and slow death after natural fires or other natural disasters or from predatory injuries – and it is unclear, state Bishop and Perszyk, why an all-loving God would create such free creatures prone to intense suffering.

Process theodicy

"Process theodicy reframes the debate on the problem of evil" by acknowledging that, since God "has no monopoly on power, creativity, and self-determination", God's power and ability to influence events are, of necessity, limited by human creatures with wills of their own. This concept of limitation is one of the key aspects of process theodicy. The God of process theology had all options available before actualizing the creation that exists, and chose voluntarily to create free persons knowing the limitations that would impose: he must not unilaterally intervene and coerce a certain outcome because that would violate free will. God's will is only one factor in any situation, making that will "variable in effectiveness", because all God can do is try to persuade and influence the person in the best direction, and make sure that possibility is available. Through knowledge of all possibilities, this God provides "ideal aims to help overcome in light of (a) the evil that has been suffered and (b) the range of good possibilities allowed by that past".

Process theology's second key element is its stressing of the "here and now" presence of God. God becomes the Great Companion and Fellow-Sufferer where the future is realized hand-in-hand with the sufferer. The God of process theology is a benevolent Providence that feels a person's pain and suffering. According to Wendy Farley, "God labors in every situation to mediate the power of compassion to suffering" by enlisting free persons as mediators of that compassion. Freedom and power are shared, therefore, responsibility must be as well. Griffin quotes John Hick as noting that "the stirring summons to engage on God's side in the never-ending struggle against the evils of an intractable world" is another key characteristic of process theology.

Critique

A hallmark of process theodicy is its conception of God as persuasive rather than coercive. Nancy Frankenberry asserts that this creates an either-or dichotomy – either God is persuasive or coercive – whereas lived experience has an "irreducible ambiguity" where it seems God can be both.

Since the 1940s, process theodicy has also been "dogged by the problem of 'religious adequacy' of its concept of God" and doubts about the 'goodness' of its view of God. It has not resolved all the old questions concerning the problem of evil, while it has raised new ones concerning "the nature of divine power, the meaning of God's goodness, and the realistic assessment of what we may reasonably hope for by way of creative advance".

"Greater good" responses

The greater good defense is more often argued in response to the evidential version of the problem of evil, while the free will defense is often discussed in the context of the logical version. Some solutions propose that omnipotence does not require the ability to actualize the logically impossible. "Greater good" responses to the problem make use of this insight by arguing for the existence of goods of great value which God cannot actualize without also permitting evil, and thus that there are evils he cannot be expected to prevent despite being omnipotent.

Skeptical theologians argue that, since no one can fully understand God's ultimate plan, no one can assume that evil actions do not have some sort of greater purpose.

Skeptical theism

Main article: Skeptical theism

"According to skeptical theism, if there were a god, it is likely that he would have reasons for acting that are beyond ken, ... the fact that we don't see a good reason for X does not justify the conclusion that there is no good reason for X". One standard of sufficient reason for allowing evil is by asserting that God allows an evil in order to prevent a greater evil or cause a greater good. Pointless evil, then, is an evil that does not meet this standard; it is an evil God permitted where there is no outweighing good or greater evil. The existence of such pointless evils would lead to the conclusion there is no benevolent god. The skeptical theist asserts that humans can't know that such a thing as pointless evil exists, that humans as limited beings are simply "in the dark" concerning the big picture on how all things work together. "The skeptical theist's skepticism affirms certain limitations to knowledge with respect to the realms of value and modality" (method). "Thus, skeptical theism purports to undercut most a posteriori arguments against the existence of God".

Skeptical theism questions the first premise of William Rowe's argument: "There exist instances of intense suffering which an omnipotent, omniscient being could have prevented without thereby losing some greater good or permitting some evil equally bad or worse"; how can that be known? John Schellenberg's argument of divine hiddenness, and the first premise of Paul Draper's Hypothesis of Indifference, which begins "Gratuitous evil exists", are also susceptible to questions of how these claimed concepts can be genuinely known.

Critique

Skeptical theism is criticized by Richard Swinburne on the basis that the appearance of some evils having no possible explanation is sufficient to agree there can be none, (which is also susceptible to the skeptic's response); and it is criticized on the basis that, accepting it leads to skepticism about morality itself.

Hidden reasons

The hidden reasons defense asserts the logical possibility of hidden or unknown reasons for the existence of evil as not knowing the reason does not necessarily mean that the reason does not exist. This argument has been challenged with the assertion that the hidden reasons premise is as plausible as the premise that God does not exist or is not "an almighty, all-knowing, all-benevolent, all-powerful". Similarly, for every hidden argument that completely or partially justifies observed evils it is equally likely that there is a hidden argument that actually makes the observed evils worse than they appear without hidden arguments, or that the hidden reasons may result in additional contradictions. As such, from an inductive viewpoint hidden arguments will neutralize one another.

A sub-variant of the "hidden reasons" defense is called the "PHOG" – profoundly hidden outweighing goods – defense. The PHOG defense, states Bryan Frances, not only leaves the co-existence of God and human suffering unanswered, but raises questions about why animals and other life forms have to suffer from natural evil, or from abuse (animal slaughter, animal cruelty) by some human beings, where hidden moral lessons, hidden social good, and other possible hidden reasons do not apply.

Soul-making or Irenaean theodicy

Main article: Irenaean theodicy

The soul-making (or Irenaean) theodicy is named after the 2nd-century Greek theologian Irenaeus whose ideas were adopted in Eastern Christianity. It has been modified and advocated in the twenty-first century by John Hick. Irenaen theodicy stands in sharp contrast to the Augustinian. For Augustine, humans were created perfect but fell, and thereafter continued to choose badly of their own freewill. In Irenaeus' view, humans were not created perfect, but instead, must strive continuously to move closer to it.

The key points of a soul-making theodicy begin with its metaphysical foundation: that "(1) The purpose of God in creating the world was soul-making for rational moral agents". (2) Humans choose their responses to the soul-making process thereby developing moral character. (3) This requires that God remain hidden, otherwise freewill would be compromised. (4) This hiddenness is created, in part, by the presence of evil in the world. (5) The distance of God makes moral freedom possible, while the existence of obstacles makes meaningful struggle possible. (6) The result of beings who complete the soul-making process is "a good of such surpassing value" that it justifies the means. (7) Those who complete the process will be admitted to the kingdom of God where there will be no more evil. Hick argues that, for suffering to have soul-making value, "human effort and development must be present at every stage of existence including the afterlife".

C. S. Lewis developed a theodicy that began with freewill and then accounts for suffering caused by disease and natural disasters by developing a version of the soul-making theodicy. Nicholas Wolterstorff has raised challenges for Lewis's soul-making theodicy. Erik J. Wielenberg draws upon Lewis's broader corpus beyond The Problem of Pain but also, to a lesser extent, on the thought of two other contemporary proponents of the soul-making theodicy, John Hick and Trent Dougherty, in an attempt to make the case that Lewis's version of the soul-making theodicy has depth and resilience.

Critique

The Irenaean theodicy is challenged by the assertion that many evils do not promote spiritual growth, but can instead be destructive of the human spirit. Hick acknowledges that this process often fails in the actual world. Particularly egregious cases known as horrendous evils, which " prima facie reason to doubt whether the participant's life could (given their inclusion in it) be a great good to him/her on the whole," have been the focus of recent work in the problem of evil. Horrendous suffering often leads to dehumanization, and its victims become angry, bitter, vindictive, depressed and spiritually worse.

Yet, life crises are a catalyst for change that is often positive. Neurologists Bryan Kolb and Bruce Wexler indicate this has to do with the plasticity of the brain. The brain is highly plastic in childhood development, becoming less so by adulthood once development is completed. Thereafter, the brain resists change. The neurons in the brain can only make permanent changes "when the conditions are right" because the brain's development is dependent upon the stimulation it receives. When the brain receives the powerful stimulus that experiences like bereavement, life-threatening illness, the trauma of war and other deeply painful experiences provide, a prolonged and difficult internal struggle, where the individual completely re-examines their self-concept and perceptions of reality, reshapes neurological structures. The literature refers to turning points, defining moments, crucible moments, and life-changing events. These are experiences that form a catalyst in an individual's life so that the individual is personally transformed, often emerging with a sense of learning, strength and growth, that empowers them to pursue different paths than they otherwise would have.

Steve Gregg acknowledges that much human suffering produces no discernible good, and that the greater good does not fully address every case. "Nonetheless, the fact that sufferings are temporal, and are often justly punitive, corrective, sanctifying and ennobling stands as one of the important aspects of a biblical worldview that somewhat ameliorates the otherwise unanswerable problem of pain".

A second critique argues that, were it true that God permitted evil in order to facilitate spiritual growth, it might be reasonable to expect that evil would disproportionately befall those in poor spiritual health such as the decadent wealthy, who often seem to enjoy lives of luxury insulated from evil, whereas many of the pious are poor and well acquainted with worldly evils. Using the example of Francis of Assisi, G. K. Chesterton argues that, contrary "to the modern mind", wealth is condemned in Christian theology for the very reason that wealth insulates from evil and suffering, and the spiritual growth such experiences can produce. Chesterton explains that Francis pursued poverty "as men have dug madly for gold" because its concomitent suffering is a path to piety.

G. Stanley Kane asserts that human character can be developed directly in constructive and nurturing loving ways, and it is unclear why God would consider or allow evil and suffering to be necessary or the preferred way to spiritual growth. Hick asserts that suffering is necessary, not only for some specific virtues, but that "...one who has attained to goodness by meeting and eventually mastering temptation, and thus by rightly making choices in concrete situations, is good in a richer and more valuable sense than would be one created ab initio in a state either of innocence or of virtue. In the former case, which is that of the actual moral achievements of mankind, the individual's goodness has within it the strength of temptations overcome, a stability based upon an accumulation of right choices, and a positive and responsible character that comes from the investment of costly personal effort."

However, the virtues identified as the result of "soul-making" may only appear to be valuable in a world where evil and suffering already exist. A willingness to sacrifice oneself in order to save others from persecution, for example, is virtuous because persecution exists. Likewise, the willingness to donate one's meal to those who are starving is valuable because starvation exists. If persecution and starvation did not occur, there would be no reason to consider these acts virtuous. If the virtues developed through soul-making are only valuable where suffering exists, then it is not clear what would be lost if suffering did not exist. C. Robert Mesle says that such a discussion presupposes that virtues are only instrumentally valuable instead of intrinsically valuable.

The soul-making reconciliation of the problem of evil, states Creegan, fails to explain the need or rationale for evil inflicted on animals and resultant animal suffering, because "there is no evidence at all that suffering improves the character of animals, or is evidence of soul-making in them". Hick differentiates between animal and human suffering based on "our capacity imaginatively to anticipate the future".

Afterlife

Thomas Aquinas suggested the afterlife theodicy to address the problem of evil and to justify the existence of evil. The premise behind this theodicy is that the afterlife is unending, human life is short, and God allows evil and suffering in order to judge and grant everlasting heaven or hell based on human moral actions and human suffering. Aquinas says that the afterlife is the greater good that justifies the evil and suffering in current life. Christian author Randy Alcorn argues that the joys of heaven will compensate for the sufferings on earth.

Stephen Maitzen has called this the "Heaven Swamps Everything" theodicy, and argues that it is false because it conflates compensation and justification. This theodical view is based on the principle that under a just God, "no innocent creature suffers misery that is not compensated by happiness at some later stage (e. g. an afterlife)" but in the traditional view, animals don't have an afterlife.

Maintzen's argument has been rejected by Seyyed Jaaber Mousavirad based on the strong account of the compensation theodicy. Two accounts of compensation theodicy can be proposed. Based on the weak interpretation that only considers compensation in afterlife, this criticism would be acceptable, but based on the strong account which consider both the "compensation in afterlife" and "the primary benefits of evils" (even if they are not greater), the compensation theodicy can be defended.

Evil not real

In the second century, Christian theologians attempted to reconcile the problem of evil with an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent God, by denying that evil exists. Among these theologians, Clement of Alexandria offered several theodicies, of which one was called "privation theory of evil" which was adopted thereafter. The other is a more modern version of "deny evil", suggested by Christian Science, wherein the perception of evil is described as a form of illusion.

Privation theory of evil

Main article: Absence of good

The early version of "deny evil" is called the "privation theory of evil", so named because it described evil as a form of "lack, loss or privation". One of the earliest proponents of this theory was the 2nd-century Clement of Alexandria who, according to Joseph Kelly, stated that "since God is completely good, he could not have created evil; but if God did not create evil, then it cannot exist". Evil, according to Clement, does not exist as a positive, but exists as a negative or as a "lack of good". Clement's idea was criticised for its inability to explain suffering in the world, if evil did not exist. He was also pressed by Gnostics scholars with the question as to why God did not create creatures that "did not lack the good". Clement attempted to answer these questions ontologically through dualism, an idea found in the Platonic school, that is by presenting two realities, one of God and Truth, another of human and perceived experience.

The fourth-century theologian Augustine of Hippo adopted the privation theory, and in his Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Love, maintained that evil exists as "absence of the good". God is a spiritual, (not corporeal), Being who is sovereign over other lesser beings because God created material reality ex nihilo. Augustine's view of evil relies on the causal principle that every cause is superior to its effects. God is innately superior to his creation, and "everything that God creates is good." Every creature is good, but "some are better than others". However, created beings also have tendencies toward mutability and corruption because they were created out of nothing. They are subject to the prejudices that come from personal perspective: humans care about what affects themselves, and fail to see how their privation might contribute to the common good. For Augustine, evil, when it refers to God's material creation, refers to a privation, an absence of goodness "where goodness might have been". Evil is not a substance that exists in its own right separately from the nature of all Being. This absence of good is an act of the will, "a culpable rejection of the infinite bounty God offers in favor of an infinitely inferior fare", freely chosen by the will of an individual.

Ben Page and Max Baker-Hytch observe that although there are numerous philosophers who explicitly advocate the privation theory, it also appears to be derived from a functional analysis of goodness, which is a widely embraced perspective in contemporary philosophy.

Critique

This view has been criticized as semantics: substituting a definition of evil with "loss of good", of "problem of evil and suffering" with the "problem of loss of good and suffering", neither addresses the issue from the theoretical point of view nor from the experiential point of view. Scholars who criticize the privation theory state that murder, rape, terror, pain and suffering are real life events for the victim, and cannot be denied as mere "lack of good". Augustine, states Pereira, accepted suffering exists and was aware that the privation theory was not a solution to the problem of evil.

Evil as illusory

An alternative modern version of the privation theory is by Christian Science, which asserts that evils such as suffering and disease only appear to be real, but in truth are illusions, and in reality evil does not exist. The theologians of Christian Science, states Stephen Gottschalk, posit that the Spirit is of infinite might, mortal human beings fail to grasp this and focus instead on evil and suffering that have no real existence as "a power, person or principle opposed to God".

The illusion version of privation theory theodicy has been critiqued for denying the reality of crimes, wars, terror, sickness, injury, death, suffering and pain to the victim. Further, adds Millard Erickson, the illusion argument merely shifts the problem to a new problem, as to why God would create this "illusion" of crimes, wars, terror, sickness, injury, death, suffering and pain; and why God does not stop this "illusion".

Turning the tables

A different approach to the problem of evil is to turn the tables by suggesting that any argument from evil is self-refuting, in that its conclusion would necessitate the falsity of one of its premises. One response – called the defensive response – has been to point out that the assertion "evil exists" implies an ethical standard against which moral value is determined, and then to argue that the fact that such a universal standard exists at all implies the existence of God.

Pandeism

Pandeism is a modern theory that unites deism and pantheism, and asserts that God created the universe but during creation became the universe. In pandeism, God is no superintending, heavenly power, capable of hourly intervention into earthly affairs. No longer existing "above," God cannot intervene from above and cannot be blamed for failing to do so. God, in pandeism, was omnipotent and omnibenevolent, but in the form of universe is no longer omnipotent, omnibenevolent.

Related issues

Philip Irving Mitchell, Director of the University Honors Program at Dallas Baptist University, offers a list of what he refers to as issues that are not strictly part of the problem of evil yet are related to it:

  • Evil and the Demonic: Mitchell writes that, given the belief in supernatural powers among all three monotheistic faiths, what do these beliefs have to do with evil?
  • The Politics of Theodicy: Does explaining the causes of evil and suffering serve as a justification for oppression by the powerful or the liberation of the powerless?
  • Horrific Evil: The Holocaust, child abuse and rape, extreme schizophrenia, torture, mass genocide, etc. Should one even speak of justification before such atrocities? What hope of restoration and healing can be given to survivors?
  • The Judgment of God: Many theodical discussions focus on "innocent" suffering and experiences of profound evil, while ignoring wrongs common to individuals, ideas, belief systems, and social structures. Can evil be understood as God's judgment upon sin and evil?
  • The Hiddenness of God: The divine hiddenness of God (deus absconditus) is sometimes considered a subset of theodicy. Why does God often seem not to openly, visibly respond to evil (or good) in an indisputable way?
  • Metaphysical Evil: What exactly is evil? What is its origin and essence?

The existential problem of evil

The existential problem asks, in what way does the experience of suffering speak to issues of theodicy and in what way does theodicy hurt or help with the experience of suffering? Dan Allender and Tremper Longman point out that suffering creates internal questions about God that go beyond the philosophical, such as: does God, or anyone, care about what I am suffering every day?

Literature and the arts

Mitchell says that literature surrounding the problem of evil offers a mixture of both universal application and particular dramatization of specific instances, fictional and non-fictional, with religious and secular views. Works such as Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe; Paradise Lost by John Milton; An Essay on Man by Alexander Pope; Candide by Voltaire; Faust by Goethe; "In Memoriam A.H.H." by Tennyson; The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky; Four Quartets by T. S. Eliot; The Plague by Camus; Night by Elie Wiesel; Holy the Firm and For the Time Being by Annie Dillard; and The Book of Sorrows by Walter Wangerin Jr. offer insights for how the problem of evil may be understood.

While artist Cornelia van Voorst first declares that, "artists do not think of the world in terms of good and bad, but more in terms of: What can we make of this?", she also offers the example of Pablo Picasso's 1935 etching Minotauromachie, currently at the Ashmolean Museum, where a little girl holds up her small shining light to confront and face down the evil Minotaur of war. Franziska Reiniger says art depicting the overwhelming evil of the Holocaust has become controversial. The painting of Lola Lieber-Schwarz – The Murder of Matilda Lieber, Her Daughters Lola and Berta, and Berta's Children Itche (Yitzhak) and Marilka, January 1942 – depicts a family lying dead on the snowy ground outside a village with a Nazi and his dog walking away from the scene. His face is not visible. The scene is cold and dead, with only the perpetrator and maybe one of his victims, a child clinging to its mother, still remaining alive. No one knows who was there to witness this event or what their relationship to these events might have been, but the art itself is a depiction of the problem of evil.

See also

Notes and references

Notes

  1. Nicola Creegan has presented the logical and evidential versions of the problem of evil when applied to animal suffering.
  2. "When stars burn, explode and die, the heavy elements are born and distributed, feeding life. When the first living organisms die, they make room for more complex ones and begin the process of natural selection. When organisms die, new life feeds on them... the sources of evil lie in attributes so valuable that we would not even consider eliminating them in order to eradicate evil."

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  107. Linda Edwards, A Brief Guide (Westminster John Knox, 2001), 62.
  108. Hart, David Bentley (12 March 2023). "A Gregorian Interview". Leaves in the Wind. Archived from the original on 14 March 2023. Retrieved 14 March 2023. Moral evil has no essence of its own, so it can only exist as a fabrication of the will continuing to will defectively. And according to tradition, even natural evil is the result of a world that's fallen into death. Somehow, that too follows from the creation of moral evil. So in Christian tradition, you don't just accept 'the world as it is.' You take 'the world as it is' as a broken, shadowy remnant of what it should have been. But obviously wherever this departure from the divine happened, or whenever, it didn't happen within terrestrial history. Now, plenty will argue: 'Oh no. It really happened within history.' No, it really didn't. This world, as we know it, from the Big Bang up until today, has been the world of death.
  109. Hart, David Bentley (2005). The Doors of the Sea: Where Was God in the Tsunami?. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans. pp. 22, 69. ISBN 9780802829764. The Christian belief in an ancient alienation from God that  reduced cosmic time to a shadowy vestige of the world God truly intends.  Something far more glorious than the pitiable resources of fallen time could ever yield.
  110. Hart, David Bentley (2020). "The Devil's March: Creatio ex Nihilo, the Problem of Evil, and a Few Dostoyevskian Meditations". Theological Territories: A David Bentley Hart Digest. Notre Dame, Indiana: Notre Dame Press. pp. 79–80. ISBN 9780268107178. The fall of rational creation and the conquest of the cosmos by death is something that appears to us nowhere within the course of nature or history; it comes from before and beyond both. We cannot search it out within the closed totality of the damaged world because it belongs to another frame of time, another kind of time, one more real than the time of death.  It may seem a fabulous claim that we exist in the long grim aftermath of a primeval catastrophe—that this is a broken and wounded world, that cosmic time is a phantom of true time, that we live in an umbratile interval between creation in its fullness and the nothingness from which it was called, and that the universe languishes in bondage to the "powers" and "principalities" of this age, which never cease in their enmity toward the kingdom of God—but it is not a claim that Christians are free to surrender.
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  114. Richard Swinburne in "Is There a God?" writes that "the operation of natural laws producing evils gives humans knowledge (if they choose to seek it) of how to bring about such evils themselves. Observing you can catch some disease by the operation of natural processes gives me the power either to use those processes to give that disease to other people, or through negligence to allow others to catch it, or to take measures to prevent others from catching the disease." In this way, "it increases the range of significant choice... The actions which natural evil makes possible are ones which allow us to perform at our best and interact with our fellows at the deepest level" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996) 108–109.
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