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    If evil is merely an absence rather than a being, God nee... — Carmelics
    Home/Natural Theology
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    Supports→Privation Theory reduces the problem of evil as a challenge to monotheism

    If evil is merely an absence rather than a being, God need not have created it

    Natural TheologyProblem of Evil
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    Natural TheologyProblem of Evil

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    If evil does not follow from the essential natures of created things, God is not...Privation Theory reduces the problem of evil as a challenge to monotheismThe problem of evil gains force from the assumption that evil is a positive bein...

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    SEP: evil-kinds-origins
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    Privation Theory thus reduces pressure on monotheism: evil is not a being but rather an absence, and so God did not create it. Moreover, evil is the kind of absence that is not a function of the essential natures of things, and so God cannot be faulted for creating things that are essentially evil. Failing to accomplish the end set out by one’s nature—failing to be the way one ought to be—is a privation, however, and so it is evil.

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