Monday 2 September 2024

Evil is a preference: a choice - and so is Good (contra- or pro-creation)

Many Christians have for many centuries wanted to be able to argue that evil was an insane unjustifiable irrationality. That it made no sense. That the only thing which did make sense was to live in obedience, and conform to the single reality that is God's creation - in the strongest possible sense that there is nothing else but God's creation. So, to be evil is to reject the only reality. 


One important half-truth behind the "relativistic" ideology of the dominant West-Globalist secular Leftism, relates to its rejection of this traditional "objective" Western Christian conceptualization of good and evil as reality versus anti-reality. 

For traditional Christianity - as (I understand) for Judaism and Islam - Good was theologically conceptualized as bound-up with God as the sole source of creation (God created everything from nothing); therefore Evil was conceptualized as objectively irrational, because it is against everything. 

Good was therefore conceptualized primarily in terms of conformity to God. 


With this scheme, there was no positive role for Man's freedom and agency except to submit to the divine order; because there is nothing except the divine order. 

There is only one coherent choice for each Man, for each Beings, in such a scheme - which is to choose allegiance to God - thus all evil is necessarily incoherent and insane*. 


Against this the false-half-truth ideology of secular Leftism proposes some version of "relativism", of the non-objectivity of values -- which is calibrated against the bottom line "hedonic" assumption that mortal life is the only life, and that the values of mortal life are therefore (merely) means towards the end of maximizing happiness and/or minimizing suffering. 

In other words, by this account, truth is whatever happens to make me most happy (or those I care about) over some timescale that I prefer - whether immediate happiness, or some kind of predictive happiness ranged over some future span. 

The more recent conceptualization that swaps happiness for the double negative-freedom-from-suffering , works the same way. Truth is just expediency with respect to minimizing suffering on a timescale from now, to some variably longer span. 


But relativism is itself incoherent for many reasons, as has been known since antiquity. It has no basis for asserting its own validity. 

And, after all, why is it assumed to be better to experience happiness and avoid suffering? Supposing I, or somebody else, says the opposite - then that is as true or untrue; and the choice between inverses depends on some utilitarian prediction of the consequences. In practice it is facile to argue that suffering now leads to happiness later - or the opposite; and the wrangling never stops unless coercively imposed!

If there are no objective values and all opinions are equally valid; then this assumption, and all other values, can be inverted - for any reason, or for no reason.


Yet relativism - in a soft and short-termist sense - clearly has some kind of powerful and lasting appeal when measured (as it is) against the "traditional Christian" version of values as objective, impersonal, and therefore a matter of submissive obedience to what is asserted to be the nature of reality. 

I think the element of truth in relativism is embedded in an individual intuition that a moral system which utterly downgrades "my" individual conscious human to (near-) irrelevance, cannot be right

When morality is made utterly objective, nothing to do with me - it becomes simple tyranny. 


Surely real, spiritually-compelling, mortality must be something that is in each of us, from each of us - and not just a thing "out there"? 

Surely we must be able to choose our values, or else they aren't values? 

And surely our choice depends on what each of us is by nature and wants most; on what each of us regards as good - and surely this is the primary moral act? 


We are confronted by reality - and (on the basis of our specific personal nature) we must and shall choose what will be our overall attitude to that reality?  

From this perspective, good does not feel like a wholly external reality, and evil does not feel irrational or incoherent; but both and either a choice rooted in what we personally most want among various possibilities. 

Then; whether we want it here-and-now, or want it in the long-term (a long-term that potentially might extend to eternity).  


So - In mainstream culture, we are apparently confronted with two incoherent and therefore false alternatives: the "Christian" supposedly being an objective and impersonal morality in which individual discernment has no positive function. 

Or there is a nihilistic fatalism where there are no values, but only an unbounded choices between arbitrary individual preferences - presumably based on the fluctuations of current feelings and emotions. In practice, the choice between-relativistic moralities seems to hinge on relative differences in the power to coerce and deceive, desire to belong to particular groups, and the like.    


My conclusion is that both alternatives should be rejected because incoherent hence false; and the truth needs to be sought in some other scheme of things. 


The truth embedded in relativism is that it is possible, rational and coherent that some people (and other beings) can and would choose to reject God and divine creation; would choose Not to affiliate to God's hopes and plans. 

And that rejection is the essence of evil. 

This rejection is a choice rooted in the fact that although we all are created Beings, are indeed Children of God; we are not entirely so - and we each and all "contain" aspects of that primordial self from-which we were created - and these primordial selves are each unique. 

Some primordial selves are less able (or perhaps unable) to love, or maybe the love is present but very weak and a low priority compared with other desires. 

Therefore, when confronted by God's creation which is rooted in love and aims at a reality of love; there are some beings who reject that vision - and who are therefore evil.

(So, I am defining good and evil by either affiliation to God's creative will and plans - rooted in love - or else the active rejection of that, for any reason. 


(There is also, I believe, a theoretical possibility of a wholly passive and personal declining to join the work of creation - a simple opting-out; without any attack on creation or any attempt to persuade others to reject God. Just a cosmic "no thanks" and a reversion to unconscious unawareness in isolation. If this happened, we would not know anything about it except that a being would "disappear" from creation.) 


As I said, some Christians (and others) want to be able to state that this rejection is incoherent, irrational, illogical - and that evil is objectively-impersonally wrong. 

They want to say that evil is: Just wrong without reference to any consciousness of any Being. 

But I would say that the objectivity of the wrongness of evil derives from the fact that by rejecting actual divine creation rooted in love, an evil Being ultimately places itself against creation as such


To be against creation is not relativistic; it is an objective fact about a Being's relationship with God and divine creation. 

Thus values are not subjective, nor are they objective - values are about a relationship

Evil is not a "mistake" of itself; but is a choice. There may be a mistake in terms of an evil Being wrongly predicting the consequences of rejecting God, rejecting love, rejecting creation...

But the error is not a logical one. Its more a matter of getting what you asked for, but not liking it when you've got it. 


*(Why it is possible for Men, or anything, to reject the divine order? If the theology says that such a choice is incomprehensibly insane, then where could this desire comes from in the first place except from God Himself?  This logical incoherence has never been clearly explained; and indeed it cannot be made coherent. Because because if God created absolutely everything that exists, then the desire to resist God must ultimately have been created by God Himself - as must all evil. Saying that God gave men Free Will does not answer this - because agency can only operate using the materials provided by God, which must mean that God made the evil in the first place, for evil to be choose-able. Yet for Christians, specifically, God is known and said to be wholly Good - so how (for a Christian) could a wholly good God provide evil for free will to be choose-able? My answer (in brief) is that God is wholly Good, and did not make evil - because God did Not make everything from nothing; but instead created using pre-existent Beings; some/most/ all of whom were capable of evil by their primordial nature. Thus evil has always been present in reality - and God is creatively working towards Goodness.) 

4 comments:

Francis Berger said...

I appreciate what you are outlining here.

"Thus values are not subjective, nor are they objective - values are about a relationship."

That's spot on. I tried to express something similar yesterday by saying that Romantic Christianity is above the antithesis between subject and object.

Otherwise, the incoherence inherent in fundamental assumptions like Omni-god and creation from nothing is too blatant to ignore or explain away via various traditional theological abstractions. Even Berdyaev realized that any proper theodicy required that evil be placed outside of God's jurisdiction, which is impossible if God is omni and created everything from nothing.

Bruce Charlton said...

@Frank - I once read a whole book (by a respected modern Protestant theologian, whose name I forget) which had the thesis that Christians must believe in the devil/ Satan - because Satan is the origin of evil.

The starting point was that many modern people are turned against the Christian God, because they blame Him for everything bad that happens and has happened - every bad thing that happens is taken as further evidence that there can't be a God.

This theologian argued that to deny Satan's significance (as so many modern Christians indeed do) then this implied that God would be made responsible for all the most evil things that had ever happened (and he provided some viscerally horrific examples of the kind of thing that God would have to be responsible for).

But I kept reading expecting him to say that, according to his own theology, blaming Satan instead of God makes absolutely no difference to God's ultimate blame; since his God made everything including Satan.

His whole book was merely kicking the can of blame one step away from God by direct will, to God via creation - and seeming to believe that this made a qualitative difference.

To me it is plain that if God is assumed to have made everything, then God must have made all the evil that ever was - because however the evil arose, from whatever cause, God had made it.

Back to your point - I've been reading people who pointed out that neither objectivity nor subjectivity made sense in the traditional ways of expounding them. I was also aware that the reason was something to do with metaphysics, with our primary assumptions concerning reality. But these run deep, and are often unexamined, taken for granted as necessary - so despite the knowledge that neither option "works" - they remain for lack of anything better.

Finding something better - better from my pint of view, that is - has been perhaps my main aim in life, as I look back on it. It certainly took a long time - several decades!

Skarp-hedin said...

Another great post that's set my head spinning. I have some questions:

1) How would you respond to someone (me) who said "Well... Evil is like "cold", it doesn't really exist. There are just varying levels of heat/goodness"? It's not proof (at all), but wasn't Dante onto something when he had Satan in the ice cold?

2) Do you see any application here for Dumezil's tripartite social function (Brahmin/Kshatriya/Vaisya)? What you describe in the middle of your post seems to me the quintessential viewpoint of the Kshastriya: personal development and expansion (if pathological). The Brahmins are "vertical" development and the Kshastriya are "horizontal" development. Brahimins then might correspond to the traditional understanding and the kshastriya to the second (external tyranny vs the internal)? These two castes are understood as physical realities of individuals. So, perhaps what we are seeing is a pathological usurpation of power by the Kshatriya?

Bruce Charlton said...

@S-h - I've already answered the first question - so far as I can tell - by defining what evil is (by my understanding) in terms of opposition to God/ divine creation.

I'm afraid I can't be bothered to find out who Dumezil is/was, or what his tripartite scheme is about!