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Groundwork in Islamic Philosophy, by Macksood A.
Aftab
Select: Problem
of Evil - The Free
Will Defense - Islamic
Reaction to the Problem of Evil
ARGUMENTS
AGAINST THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
Problem
of Evil
One of the major arguments proposed against the
existence of God in contemporary western philosophy
is the problem of evil. It is based upon the
inability to reconcile the magnitude of evil in the
world with the all-loving nature of God. John Hick
describes the problem from the perspective of its
proponent: "If God is perfectly loving, God must
wish to abolish all evil; and if God is
all-powerful, God must be able to abolish all evil.
But evil exists; therefore God cannot be both
omnipotent and perfectly loving." This thus causes
difficulty for the Judeo-Christian-Islamic God who
possess both qualities of being all-loving and
omnipotent. David Hume is a proponent of this view
and argues that the sheer amount of evil, which may
outweigh the good, in the world makes dubious that
a deity exists [Pojman , p.167].
The main response to this kind of an argument is
known as the free-will defense. It is based on the
premise that for God to create self-directly and
independent agents like humans, he had to grant a
certain amount of freedom to them, and this freedom
would inevitably result in human-to-human evil. It
has been proposed that there need not be a
contradiction between God creating morally free
agents and making it the case that all their
actions turn out to be good.
But it can be argued that in that case, are the
beings really as free as humans? If all our actions
were predestined in this way, there would be a
sense in which we would not be free and only an
allusion be created thereof. Although God could
have created beings of this sort, they would have
amounted to mere puppets and not vibrant beings as
envisioned by God [Hick, pp. 39-41].
The
Free Will Defense
The primary difficulty with the problem of evil
is resolving the apparent conflict between the
reality of evil in the world and the claim that God
is:
- Omniscient -- All knowing
- Omnipotent &endash; All powerful and
- Wholly Good
One version of the free will defense is to
compare the current state of the world with a world
in which all actions were good and no evil was
possible. It is important here to point out that
the good that is being referred to is 'moral good.'
That is, it is good that is a result of the
conscious actions of people. This is distinct from
'natural good' or 'natural evil' which maybe result
from non-human causes. The free will defense (FWD)
theorist points out that in order for man to be in
a position to do 'moral good' he must be
'significantly free.' That is, he must be in a
position to make a choice between making a morally
good or evil action. Given that in the current
world (World-1) human agents are given this
freedom, a certain level of moral evil is
unavoidable. This world would still be more
preferable to a possible World-2 in which there
were no free actions (thus no freedom) but all
actions performed were entirely good.
A critic of this defense will point out that if
God is all-powerful (omnipotent) then it ought to
be in His capacity to create a World-3 in which
humans had freedom, yet all their actions turned
out to be good. Thus their actions would be
predetermined to be good, yet they would still have
the free option of choosing between morally good or
bad actions. The agent would have the freedom to
chose any action they like, it would just be that
whatever choice they made it would turn out to be
good. This would entirely be within God's power
since He is omnipotent and is only limited by
logical impossibilities.
The challenge for the FWD theorist is to show
that Freedom and Causal Determinism are both
mutually inconsistent. It can't both be the case
that humans are free agents, and that their actions
are causally predetermined [Pojman, p.
203]. The crucial question is, can God can
create any world?
Alvin Plantinga attempts to answer this
question. First, he points out that Leibniz was
mistaken in thinking that God would have to, and
thus did, create the best possible world. Plantinga
argues that there can be no such thing as the best
possible world, since to any world one more unit of
pleasure or goodness can be added to make it even
better. Thus it seems implausible to think of the
best possible world as existing. This then is one
instance when God cannot create any world.
Secondly, he argues that God cannot create a world
in which Man is both significantly free, yet his
actions are already determined. His proof on this
premise has to do with a thought experiment.
We can imagine a case in the present world in
which we know given certain conditions person A
would hypothetically engage in a morally evil
action. It would no be impossible for God to create
a world that were almost identical the present
world, except that the person would then not engage
in the evil. Since, to do so would deny him the
freedom of individuality and his personality. That
is, for God to ensure that he not engage in the
evil would deny his freedom. The only other
solution is for God to not create the world at all.
He argues that for any world God could create,
which included freedom, there is at least one
action on which Man would go wrong, or else he
could not create any world at all. This phenomenon
he calls transworld depravity. Therefore, for God
to create a world in which humans had moral
freedom, the existence of both Good and Evil is
necessary [Platinga, p. 211].
Islamic
Reaction to the Problem of Evil
Islamic philosophers of the middle ages did not
address this problem in any direct fashion. This
maybe because in the context of Muslim thought, the
existence of God was a prerequisite. In fact, the
aim of the philosophers was to prove the existence
of God using Aristotelian logic. So we do not find
Muslim philosophers arguing against the existence
of God, on the contrary they are attempting to
justify the qualities of God from a philosophical
perspective.
The Muslim philosophers did, however, tackle a
different but somewhat similar issue concerning the
unity of God. The central problem facing them was
how to reconcile the absolute unity and perfection
of God with the fact that there exists in the world
such great amounts of imperfections. If God is all
perfect and the world is a result of divine will,
we are then faced with the problem of duality
between God and His will. Yet it is this very
difference (i.e. the imperfection of the world)
that sets it apart from God (who is perfect).
How is this consistent with the absolute unity
(tawhid) of God which is so central to Islamic
doctrine? This issue had been one of the major
issues of Muslim thought, and was a subject of
great debate between Al-Ghazzali, and other
neo-platonic Muslim thinkers [Landau, p.
17].
It is, however, difficult to find any direct
analogue to the problem of evil in medieval Islamic
philosophy. However, some positions held by early
Muslim thinkers maybe relevant to the free will
defense. Early Muslim Aristotelian thinkers like
Ibn Sina held that God is a necessary being, who
had no other attributes besides His existence, and
that all other beings emanated from the divine by
necessity. Despite holding this position, they
attempted to reconcile it with Islamic
doctrines.
Ghazzali points out that this is not possible.
That is, to say that whatever proceeds from God
does so by necessity denies God agency, i.e. it
denies Him Free Will. If God has no will, since he
has no attributes, then God has no free choice to
decide which world to create. It seems that
Ghazzali's criticism can be equally applied to
advocate of the problem of evil who states that God
by necessity must always in a way that will ensure
that its consequences are wholly good. This would
then break down the dilemma posed by trying to
reconcile the divine attributes of omniscience,
omnipotence, wholly goodness versus the reality of
evil in the world. Since, now God would not be
obliged to abide by the condition of wholly
goodness [Ghazzali, p. 63].
Another stream of thought in Islam, advocated by
Ghazzali, Ibn Arabi, Al-Attas and Islamic mystical
traditions, is to argue that the only true way to
grasp the ultimate reality, and thus resolve this
problem is through a "direct awareness of Reality,"
unencumbered by intellectual interference (Laudau
20). This aspect will be discussed at length in the
Arguments from Religious Experience section.
The lack of intense debate on the problem of
evil maybe because the problem was not formulated
at the time, or that Muslim thinkers were
preoccupied by other issues. In modern times, the
20th century Islamic philosopher Muhammad Iqbal
does attempt to address this problem.
He suggests that Goodness would not be possible
without the resistance of evil. The evil in the
world is meant to be overcome. Whoever asks why
must there be evil when God can remove it is
missing the point. Iqbal insists that without evil
there could be no moral or spiritual development.
He sites a simile used by Kant in which he refers
to birds who resent the resistance of air, yet it
is the very air that allows them to fly high, they
would be unable to do so in a vacuum. Likewise, a
certain amount of evil is necessary for the inner
growth of humans, so that they may be able to
overcome it [Sharif, p. 1628]. As the
Quran states, "And for trial will We test
you with evil and with Good" [21:35].
Iqbal could here be subject to criticism, since
he has ignored the victims of evil. What about
those people who suffered so the rest of mankind
could build itself? Iqbal's answer here would be
consistent with his philosophy of self. Like
Nietzche, Iqbal believed that ultimately the self,
the individual is the only thing of utmost
importance. That is we have no concrete knowledge
of the external world and factors therein. What we
can be sure of is only ourselves, hence, we must
view happenings to beings other than ourselves only
in the capacity in which they help to build
ourselves. The fact that the suffering of an
innocent victim serves to bolster our personality
is sufficient. The independent suffering of the
external individual cannot be verified.
Nietzche has criticized Christian theology for
placing mankind in a state of guilt for the
original sin, Iqbal had pointed out that this
concept of original sin is absent in Islam, and
that the Quran encouraged a positive self image of
the self or man. Many modern Christian theologians
also adopt this view.
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Copyright (c) 2000 by Macksood A. Aftab. All
Rights Reserved. Reprinted with permission.
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