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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page essay takes a look at Hume's arguments regarding the architect of man (or God) and why there is evil in the world. It is argued that evil is necessary due to man's nature and the nature of the world. No bibliography.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA245Hum.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
condemn the architect." Indeed, one will have a recognition of this statement that suggests humans certainly find blame in all. At the same time, this analogy is obviously one that
is related to the Supreme being who is the architect of man. People do tend to blame problems of the world on God, even though the problems were been caused
by humans. Why do they blame the architect? It is because, as an architect, he created the human beings in the first place. Thus, it is argued that it is
the design that is flawed. Put another way, one could ask whether or not the world had been created in such a way that it is different from what
a man, with limited knowledge, would expect from a Supreme being. It is hard to argue this point that asks a question, but really provides one with the ludicrousness of
judging God. After all, if God created man and he is omnipotent and omniscient and so forth, how can man judge his maker? Man only has limited intelligences and he
does not have the authority nor the ability to make a judgment about a superior being. It is like a child second guessing his parents. An eight year old may
argue that it is proper for him to go to a particular event by himself, but his parents worry about him and realize that he is not old enough to
be on his own in certain areas. Similarly, God knows what is best for man, but man does not have the ability to comprehend just what that is and why.
Also, even though the world is consistent, allowing some suppositions and conjectures with the idea of a Deity in mind, it can never allow man the luxury of inference concerning
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