In City of God, Book XII, chapters six through eight, Augustine argues that there is no efficient cause of evil will. I will first define the terms “evil” and “will” according to Augustine. Evil is a privation of a substance or nature, a corruption of good. A will is the ability to choose and make decisions voluntarily. Thus, an evil will is an action or state of voluntarily choosing to do bad. In this essay I will analyze Augustine’s argument in which he goes through the many possibilities of the origin or efficient the cause of evil will.
To begin his argument, Augustine states that bad will is the cause of bad action, but nothing is the efficient cause of bad will (Book XII, 6), I believe this is Augustine’s first premise in his argument.
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Augustine states, “I ask if it has been existing in some nature. For if not, then it did not exist at all; and if it did exist in some nature, then it vitiated and corrupted it, and injured it, and consequently deprived it of good. (Book XII, 6)” From this statement I draw the conclusion that if evil will exists as part of something’s nature then it’s a corruption of that nature. Therefore, evil will must exist in some nature that is inherently good and changeable (Section). The other part of this premise is suggesting that the evil will was always evil. Yet, this …show more content…
Also, it can be concluded that the efficient cause of evil will is not caused by another will but a will-less cause. Augustine states the following question, “I ask, then, whether this thing was superior, inferior, or equal to it? (Book XII,6)” The thing cannot be superior because that would mean having no will is better than have a will which is not true. The thing cannot be equal because if two things both have good will then one cannot make the other have evil will. So the will-less thing must be inferior, but by nature it is still a good thing (Section). Therefore, the efficient cause of evil will is not another will and not a will-less thing but the will itself. The will itself is the cause of evil will because of its inordinate desire of an inferior thing over a higher good (Lecture, 01/23/17). In other words, there is a privation of order in the will. All moral evil can be described as inordinate
St. Augustine’s On Free Choice of the Will elaborates on the relationship between God, free will, and evil. During the very beginning of Book One, he asks the question, “isn’t God the cause of evil” (Cahn 357). From this question, it can be ascertained that he searches for a connection between God and evil (sins), which inferred in the writing to be connected though free will. He believes that God does not create evil, but rather that evil is simply the lack of good, since God is completely good and, therefore, cannot create evil. God not being the source of evil is then further elaborated through his explanation of a crime and how it is caused by inordinate desires and human abuse of good things (Cahn 360). By explaining
“Where then is evil, and what is its source, and how has it crept into the creation? What is its root, what is its seed?”1 These are the first of the many inquiries that Augustine makes in his work entitled the Confessions. In fact, the question of 'what is evil' is the main concern of Augustine, eventually leading the theologian from Manicheanism, a heresy that Augustine spent nine years of his life practicing, back into the arms of the Church. The Manichees are not willing to say that God created evil, and so therefore evil must have existed from the very beginning, possessing its own being. At this time, Augustine has a very Platonist view of things and begins to question this view of the Manichees. As a Platonist, Augustine asserts that all being is fundamentally good because all being comes from a supreme Good, which is God. As it says in
Saint Augustine's Deduction that Free Will is a Good Gift from God Before the central theme of this essay is analytically summarized, it is important to note a few propositions already established in the conversations between Saint Augustine and Evodius. Firstly, Saint Augustine has already ascertained that God gave human beings free choice of the will – Evodius is also sure of this proposition. He deduces that since our existence came from God, then it must be God who gave us free will.
The cause of evil itself, according to Augustine, is the human will, and thus all blame for it rests on our shoulders, not on Gods. We willfully turn our souls away from God when we perform evil deeds. Even the punishment that God imposes on us for our evil is something that we brought on ourselves. Consequently, a first solution that Augustine offers to the problem of evil is that human will is the cause of evil and reason for divine punishment. A second and related solution is that the evil we willfully create within our souls is only a deprivation of goodness. Think of God’s goodness like a bright white light; the evil that we humans create is like an act of dimming that light, or shielding ourselves from it to create an area of darkness. It is not like we’ve created a competing light source of our own, such as a bright red light that we shine around to combat God’s bright white light. Accordingly, the evil that we create through our wills is the absence of good, and not a substantive evil in itself.
This paper examines St. Augustine’s view on evil. St. Augustine believed that God made a perfect world, but that God's creatures turned away from God of their own free will and that is how evil originated in the world. Augustine assumes that evil cannot be properly said to exist at all, he argues that the evil, together with that suffering which is created as punishment for sin, originates in the free nature of the will of all creatures. According to Augustine, God has allowed evil to exist in the world because it does not conflict with his righteousness. He did not create evil but is also not a victim of it. He simply allows it to exist.
In Augustine’s On Free Choice of the Will he explains that the human soul is predisposed to have a good will and that “it is a will by which we desire to live upright and honorable lives and to attain the highest wisdom” (Augustine 19, 1993). Augustine believes that in order to be free we must live according to our good will. To follow our good will we must live according to the four main virtues in life: prudence, fortitude, temperance, and justice. He defines prudence as having “the knowledge of what is to be desired and what is to be avoided” (Augustine 20, 1993). Augustine establishes fortitude as “the disposition of the soul by which we have no fear of misfortune or of the loss of things that are not in our power” (Augustine 20,1993).
To Augustine, an evil act is one that moves any member of creation towards exclusion from God’s universe. If a being with free will elects to move away from God for a temporal end, they are moving towards corruption or death and unleashing this force on the world around them. Once a body becomes in entirely corrupted it has no existence whatsoever, it is irrelevant to this reality and we can only imagine it based on the imprint left before it was no more. This is the ultimate death; complete exclusion from God’s universe and Augustine contrasts it with the ultimate Good, which is complete inclusion with God’s universe. Once something is outside of God’s universe, it is impossible for it have any effect. (7.13.1)
Notably, one of Augustine’s claims that all things subject to decay are good, they could not become corrupt unless they were in some way good. In addition, he says if someone were supremely good, it would not be
God is according to Augustine the single sovereign, who rules over everything, even the evil forces in the universe. This sovereignty is grounded in Augustine’s understanding that God created everything. This assumption ultimately solves the question why evil exists. It exists because God created it, just like he created everything else. Augustine suggests that everything God creates in inherently good. However, creatures can become “evil” because they are prone to corruption (Mann 44). Furthermore, rational beings have
This is a significant problem to the revealed religions because they believe in a wholly good and omnipotent God. Why then, would this God allow evil? In this paper, I will provide, explain, and evaluate St. Augustine of Hippo’s
According to Augustine, “Human beings are endowed with a power that he calls the will.” He emphasizes the will to being the center of freedom. Unlike other philosophers, who are determinists, Augustine, who has a libertarian view, sees our will as free choice. So for whatever we may choose to do, we become solely responsible for our actions which are caused by external factors instead of internal ones.
Last semester, I took a philosophical inquiry class and within it I learned about the problem of evil. It was an idea that drew me in not because of the problem itself, but rather because of all the people who chose to believe in an omnipotent, omnibenevolent, and omniscient God while ignoring the problem of evil. Because of this, when Kristen Wagner shared with my theology class that she wanted to examine the different ways that Augustine viewed the problem of evil throughout his life, I was intrigued by the idea. Augustine wrestled with the problem of evil for many years of his life, questioning why God made this creation but left in it some element which He did not convert into good.
In order to make sense of St. Augustine’s definition of evil as the absence of good, it is helpful to know how he came up with it. It is true that
Augustine formulated the Problem of Evil by observing that evil does not exist in the world. God allows his creatures to choose between good and evil. The choices are either good or supreme good. All elements of life are good themselves but the choice of moving away from good can be a consequence of evil. He makes it evident by describing the good as being corrupt because the bad Is not capable of being corruptible.
St. Augustine through his philosophical journey is trying to find where evil comes from. From his notion God gave humans a unique characteristic called reason. Reason is what brings human closer to God. God has reason and intellect and animals don’t. Then evil cannot be connected to God, it must come from somewhere else.