browneyes' scrapbook
Nuthing but just a scrapbook for myself by myself.
Contains several dump feeds and quoted photos (for aesthetic cultivation) or texts caught my eyes on the internet.
(Texts are mostly in Japanese and VERY sometimes in English.)
個人的なシンビガンミガキ&インターネッツ上で気になったモノ収集用スクラップブックです。
人様には価値のないフィードなんかも垂れ流してますので、時につまんないものしか流れなかったりもしますよ、っと。
Problem of evil - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Logical problem of evil
- God exists. (premise)
- God is omnipotent and omniscient. (premise — or true by definition of the word “God”)
- God is all-benevolent. (premise — or true by definition)
- All-benevolent beings are opposed to all evil. (premise — or true by definition)
- All-benevolent beings who can eliminate evil will do so immediately when they become aware of it. (premise)
- God is opposed to all evil. (conclusion from 3 and 4)
- God can eliminate evil completely and immediately. (conclusion from 2)
- Whatever the end result of suffering is, God can bring it about by ways that do not include suffering. (conclusion from 2)
- God has no reason not to eliminate evil. (conclusion from 7.1)
- God has no reason not to act immediately. (conclusion from 5)
- God will eliminate evil completely and immediately. (conclusion from 6, 7.2 and 7.3)
- Evil exists, has existed, and probably will always exist. (premise)
- Items 8 and 9 are contradictory; therefore, one or more of the premises is false: either God does not exist, evil does not exist, or God is not simultaneously omnipotent, omniscient, and all-benevolent (i.e. God is omnipotent and omniscient but not all-benevolent, omnipotent and all-benevolent but not omniscient, or omniscient and all-benevolent but not omnipotent).
Related:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_problem_of_HellRebuttals:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodicy#Examples_of_theodicy

