Kalam Cosmological Problem of Evil
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Revision as of 06:47, 8 August 2011
Kalam Cosmological Problem of Evil
- Everything that begins to exist has a cause.
- The Evil began to exist.
- Therefore, Evil must have a cause.
We know that evil is an abstraction, and for it to exist it must be cognized. Either God is the cause of this cognition (two faced pan-moral god -Hinduism) or God is not the cause of this cognition (two opposing forces of good and evil -Zoroastrianism) In Christianity, God knows all things. By virtue of this fact God is the creator of evil and the source of immorality.
If premise 2 is wrong, then Evil must have existed from the beginning
- Everything that did not begin to exist has no cause
- The Evil did not began to exist.
- Therefore, Evil does not have a cause.
Therefore if God exists either:
- He is the source of evil and therefore not omnibenevolent,
- He has an equally powerful rival power
- He is not omnipotent.