"THE PROBLEM OF EVIL
Why do we exist? The answer, according to the major monotheistic religions, including the Catholic faith in which I was raised, is that an all-powerful, supernatural entity created us. This deity loves us, as a human father loves his children, and wants us to behave in a certain way. If we’re good, He’ll reward us. If we’re bad, He’ll punish us. (I use the pronoun “He” because most scriptures describe God as male.)
My main objection to this explanation of reality is the problem of evil. A casual glance at human history, and at the world today, reveals enormous suffering and injustice. If God loves us and is omnipotent, why is life so horrific for so many people? A standard response to this question is that God gave us free will; we can choose to be bad as well as good."
I perfectly agree, the problem of evil really makes a mockery of many lofty, aerial, disconnected speculations that abound in many religious and metaphysical circles. In that respect i find monotheistic religions extremely childish and impotent. The proposed solutions to the problem of evil also seems to me really handwavy.
For instance, let's talk about free-will, first of all not all suffering is man made, some extreme form of suffering like natural disasters or just
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluster_headache has nothing, absolutely nothing to do with free-will. Besides, libertarian free-will is conceptually absurd, i wouldn't even say that it exists or doesn't exist, it doesn't even make sense conceptually and enough holes have been poked in it - persuasively IMHO - for instance see Galen Strawson basic argument against free-will
https://www.informationphilosopher.com/ ... strawsong/
I don't see how idealism changes anything to the fact that we always act based on anterior reasons, after all, we can't act based on information/knowledge/wisdom we don't have, nor be moved by an aspect of our personality or temperament we don't have, and we either act based upon reasons, or we would act randomly, randomness isn't free-will.
Even if we assume that free-will is real somewhat, free-will only allows you to act based on natural constraints, for instance in can't fly using free-will, nor can i make myself feel intense euphoria by just willing it, i can't cause physical pain on someone who has a genetic immunity to pain
https://medlineplus.gov/genetics/condit ... y-to-pain/ but in the monotheistic religions, god is the creator of the natural constraints, having free-will doesn't say anything on why we should have bodies conductive to such extreme level of pains as in
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluster_headache , why tootache should have the level of intensity they have, or mental pain be as intense as in severe cases of insomnias or clinical depression. The reverse conditions doesn't exist - clinical euphoria - , it doesn't say anything on why our tendency to crave and attach is strong but the ascetic/contemplative path is extremely hard, after all, it would be perfectly plausible to have a situation where it's 50%/50% and half the world is following a contemplative path and the other half is following sensual and other wordly pleasures.
But the notion of free-will, besides being extremely problematic in itself, is used in handwavy fashion to skirt the problem of evil. For the reasons i enumerated, those attempts seems to me superficial and lacking in multiple aspects.