That’s a phrase that I heard recently, and I think that it’s from some famous philosopher, but uhm…

I don’t know how to debunk it.

I’m doing my best to believe without thinking too much about that.

Some days it gets hard tho, so I’d like to hear you guys’ take on it.

  • Semester3383@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    The core assumption here is that our definition of good is the same as any god’s definition of good. What if this god has a definition of good that seems evil to us? What if god enjoys and approves of genocide, of earthquakes that kill thousands, or volcanic eruptions that cause crops to fail and mass starvations for the next two years?

    Why assume that any god would have our best interests in their heart? Why not see god as someone that’s a Warhammer 40K enthusiast, someone that enjoys pitting enormous armies against each other in wholesale slaughter?

    • dandelion (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      20 days ago

      because the definition of omnibenevolence uses our concept of goodness, the Christian concept is that God is all good in the sense that we mean it …