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The evil question...

Started by Spike, January 19, 2007, 03:59:02 PM

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Spike

Rather than waste time an energy in the vast 'throw philosophy degrees at one another' thread, which I long ago conceeded defeat in, I thought I'd bring this topic up in a new thread where it really belongs.

One of the great assumptions of western thought is that Evil exists, that it is a real, quantifiable thing.   Aside from some casual amusement from working out what that means (eg: evil is not the abscence of good, nor do they exist side by side, but good is the abscence (relative) of evil. As Darkness is the absence of light, cold is the absence of heat, etc...)

But I do not believe in Evil.  It doesn't exist. It is a failing of human thought processess to assume it does, unchallenged.  Suffering exists, certainly, but suffering is relative, even subjective.  Often we create our own suffering, in western thought this is viewed as evidence of 'Free will'.  Doug does not 'allow' suffering to exist so much as He refuses to prevent it because it would interfere with Free Will.  It leads to interesting discussions of the Ethics of Doug...

But not all suffering is created by people.  One could argue that the spread of disease is not caused by humanity. It's arguable, of course, most things are if you are willing to look.  Unsanitary living conditions are often a choice. The spread of the black plague can be linked to the mongol hordes and the seige of byzantium... in theory.  Smallpox epidemics in the Americas came from European visitors.  

Let us remove the human element, then. Natural disasters are a good example of suffering created outside of humanity. Often anyway. Mudslides can be linked to deforestation, as are many fires.  Of course volcanoes, earthquakes and others are, as yet, outside our influence.  Thus, suffering created by those can be used to show how Free Will is not the only reason Suffering exists.  Thus we can argue that Doug allows Evil... as long as one agrees that suffering and evil can be synonimous.

Only...

only....

Many times we ignore the bigger picture. The world exists in balance and humanity is not necessarily the ultimate benefactor of the world. We do not exist to be served by nature.  It is human vanity that writes our relgions to make it so.  If an animal kills a man it is because the animal must eat, and man is merely another source of meat.  Recently it has been shown that forest fires are necessary aspects of the life cycle of forests. That some animals, including man, may die or be inconvienced, is of no concern for the overall health of the ecosystem as a whole.

Bah, you say.  Such suffering is unnecessary, a better, less painful method must exist, and even if it didn't Doug could surely invent one.

Suffering, however, is not unnecessary.  Imagine for yourself the perfect world, where there was no want, no need, no pain... no suffering at all.  What would you do in such a world?  What would anyone do?  

It has been suggested that an artist's art suffers when the artist does not.  The man who hits the big time, marries a good woman and has happy adjusted children can no longer tap that need for something better that informed the works that drove him to success.  He becomes content, even complacent and is happiest just 'coasting' on his previous successes.   Suffering drives us, pushes us to change, to grow to improve. It contrasts the misery of now with the potential pleasures of later.   Can you know light without darkness? Can you know Good without Evil?  I submit to you that you can not.  As stories are driven by conflict, so too are game worlds, and so too are we.  We are driven by our conflicts, by our baser needs and wants, and by the suffering we create and are exposed to on a daily basis.

Perhaps there is a omnibenevolent, omnifisient, omnipotent Doug out there, and yet suffering exists, because Evil does not, and suffering serves a purpose.  Suffering is GOOD for us.  Life is short for a reason. I can name half a dozen reasons why we must die.   I fear the day mankind discovers the means to immortality, and the vision of the world that will follow disturbs me.
For you the day you found a minor error in a Post by Spike and forced him to admit it, it was the greatest day of your internet life.  For me it was... Tuesday.

For the curious: Apparently, in person, I sound exactly like the Youtube Character The Nostalgia Critic.   I have no words.

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Dominus Nox

I do believe in pure, true evil, because I have met "people" who were nothing but pure evil made flesh. That's all I can say, I can't explain it, I can't say why it exists but I know it does.
RPGPundit is a fucking fascist asshole and a hypocritial megadouche.

James McMurray

I don't believe in evil as some sort of universal force, but I do think it's an apt descriptor for some of the things humans do to one another.

Spike

You describe what you see as evil (rather than Evil)... I see it as misplaced survival behavior. Sometimes not even misplaced.  Human beings are remarkable biological machines, and while higher order thought is a nice little addition to the normal package deal (an option, like Air conditioning if you will...), in reality in tends to interface poorly with the biological imperatives of your hardwired minds...

Thus your higher brain functions see suffering and evil, while your lower brain goes... 'yeah, I need that more than that stranger consuming my resources does...'...

and so Doug is created to explain the difficulty. Only we want Doug to be a nice guy, which again doesn't jibe with the fact that we see bad stuff, so some guys call themselves philosophers and discuss moldy ideas without ever questioning the premises the use...
For you the day you found a minor error in a Post by Spike and forced him to admit it, it was the greatest day of your internet life.  For me it was... Tuesday.

For the curious: Apparently, in person, I sound exactly like the Youtube Character The Nostalgia Critic.   I have no words.

[URL=https:

James McMurray

The two can be the same thing. "Evolutionary urges that don't fit the modern world" is a cause. "Evil" is a moral judgement. I'm comfortable making moral judgements on people that can't control their evolutionary urges.

But at least for me, it's rare that just a misplaced evolutionary urge will cause me to label someone evil. While that sort of thing might, for instance, cause a murder, it's unlikely to cause torture followed by cannibalisms and necrophilia. Murder in and of itself isn't evil, just wrong. You have to go the extra mile to move from bad to Dark.

joewolz

I'm drunk, so I won't type too much, but:

Howard K. Bloom's The Lucifer Principle is a study into the biological necessity of evil.  It's an interesting read.
-JFC Wolz
Co-host of 2 Gms, 1 Mic

droog

You have a slave's mentality, Spike. The true Übermensch is beyond good and evil. It is others who suffer, not me.
The past lives on in your front room
The poor still weak the rich still rule
History lives in the books at home
The books at home

Gang of Four
[/size]

Spike

Droog, why would I seek to emulate a super 'man' when I am already a superior lifeform?  To be beyond good or evil one must first accept their reality, as I do not.

James: I do not thing our biological imperative 'survival behavior' is out of place in the modern world at all. I think it is a failing of our modern civilization that we have not come to term with our natures and seek to make their existance a part of our civilized behavior.  This isn't to say every act should be accepted freely, far from it, but some of the more extreme perversions of behavior you name are often either outgrowths of ruthless supression of the animal nature or are more harmless expressions of survival behavior. In times of need, humans can be viewed as a meat animal (re: cannibalism), and in cultures which practice it, they do not simply blindly feed on one another but ascribe it ritual and traditional venues for outlets.   Necrophilia is an outgrowth of repressed sexuality, which has been stated in some sources to be a biological need on par with non-sexual social contact.  It disgusts us because we have too much value, vanity, of our selves in the world. Further, in the later case, it is in fact a perverted survival behavior, thus disgusting because it serves no purpose beyond gratification of the individual.
For you the day you found a minor error in a Post by Spike and forced him to admit it, it was the greatest day of your internet life.  For me it was... Tuesday.

For the curious: Apparently, in person, I sound exactly like the Youtube Character The Nostalgia Critic.   I have no words.

[URL=https:

James McMurray

I don't think all biological imperative is out of place, nor are cannibalism or necrophila by themselves evil. Torture, canniballism (note the lack of mentioning murder in between), and then necrophilia would be. Eating and fucking corpses by itself is just nasty, not Evil. Again, you have to go the extra mile to be Evil.

hgjs

Quote from: SpikeDroog, why would I seek to emulate a super 'man' when I am already a superior lifeform?

You mean a pokemon?
 

Balbinus

Quote from: SpikePerhaps there is a omnibenevolent, omnifisient, omnipotent Doug out there, and yet suffering exists, because Evil does not, and suffering serves a purpose.  Suffering is GOOD for us.  Life is short for a reason. I can name half a dozen reasons why we must die.   I fear the day mankind discovers the means to immortality, and the vision of the world that will follow disturbs me.

Sure, but how does the death of a four year old girl in a Peruvian mudslide benefit anyone?  In particular, since this is the only life she has in this world, how is it good for her?

Balbinus

Quote from: SpikeSuffering, however, is not unnecessary.  Imagine for yourself the perfect world, where there was no want, no need, no pain... no suffering at all.  What would you do in such a world?  What would anyone do?  

One of the buddhist hells works that way, you get whatever you want instantly without effort, it is not seen as a reward.

So, I entirely accept that some suffering is a good thing for creatures like us, but where I differ is that some suffering we see goes beyond that.

Having to work all Summer to afford a new toy as a kid is not necessarily such a bad thing, having horrifically painful bowel cancer though seems less beneficial overall.

James McMurray

Quote from: BalbinusSure, but how does the death of a four year old girl in a Peruvian mudslide benefit anyone?  In particular, since this is the only life she has in this world, how is it good for her?

This is just one of the many possibilities, but perhaps it saves her an assload of suffering later in life and shuffles her farther along the path to the rockin' grooviness that is Dougland. Meanwhile down on Earth the family finds a stronger bind between them and more internal strength as they cope both seperately and together with their loss.

Spike

If you accept the Reincarnation Model (inventing terms via capitalization... go ME!) as valid, she is burning off bad Karma. Of course, when you scale down to the individual level, the universe is a vast and uncaring place. The mudslide killed a little girl who hadn't harmed a thing. It is evil.

But it isn't. Mudslides do not 'just occur'. They are caused by erosion, they are a part of the physical model of the universe, causality if you like. Man removes the trees from the hills for firewood, mudslides occur because the infrastructure that holds the wet dirt in place is now gone.  Free will, as exercised by man, caused the mudslide, and the girl was not killed by Doug, but by men.

Mudslides, of all the natural disasters that afflict communities of man are a result of our own imperfect use of the enviroment around us.  Right up there was fires.
For you the day you found a minor error in a Post by Spike and forced him to admit it, it was the greatest day of your internet life.  For me it was... Tuesday.

For the curious: Apparently, in person, I sound exactly like the Youtube Character The Nostalgia Critic.   I have no words.

[URL=https:

Hastur T. Fannon

One response to the problem of Evil that's unique to Christianity is that of Emmanual, "God with us".  God became a human being and experienced evil and suffering as one of us.  This means that He understands what we're going through even if we don't understand why it's happening