Moral evil
Natural evil
Suffering
the mental or physical pain/hardship/distress brought about by both moral and natural evil
Examples of natural evil (events)
Examples of moral evil (events)
Logical POE: Mackie’s inconsistent triad
The Free Will Defence
Eschatology
the theology of what will happen at the end of the universe
John Hick’s eschatological solution
Evidential problem of evil
There are known facts about evil that are evidence against the existence of God:
- Evil that is overwhelming in quantity and quality
- Evil that is pointless/gratuitous because it serves no useful purpose
Evidential POE examples
Rowe’s example of a fawn
Why suffering could be good in some circumstances
Mackie’s account of the Free Will Defence
First-order good
a good at the basic level of human experience
Second-order good
higher-level or more abstract values that emerge from the interplay of first-order goods and evils
Mackie’s rejection of the Free Will Defence
Plantinga’s rejection of Mackie’s rejection of the Free Will Defence
The Irenaean Theodicy
Hick’s soul-making theodicy
Griffin’s process theology
Epistemic distance
A distance of knowledge. The world operates in such a way that humans cannot know from it that there is a God, otherwise it would be impossible not to be influenced by the knowledge and faith would not be genuine
Panentheism
‘everything is in God’
God is the soul of the universe, existing therefore within space and time
The Augustinian Theodicy