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My view of this whole issue is that if God were good and perfect, the universe should be perfect, otherwise why did he make it imperfect? Why would he create suffering? It's hard to view the world as it is as perfect, as part of some perfect plan, since an all-powerful God is responsible for everything we know, including the rules of logic and reality. You could have the world exactly as is, but add one exception to it -- that good people don't feel pain, let's say. Why not do that? The only view I see in which the world might be seen as perfect is if it's perfect in its flow, not in its state. In other words, it's not perfect right now, but that through time the world purifies itself. This does not mean that it's going to a perfect state, because why not create that perfect state and maintain it from the very beginning. It means that the flow from bad to good is the the perfection of the world. That change and its structure is perfection. Suffering leads to knowledge and understanding, and perhaps suffering is actually a good thing, I'm just too young to realize it. I still think the world could've been more heaven-like and people would still learn in it though. The free will arguments don't particularly convince me, because I think there's plenty that people aren't capable of that God didn't give us, that if he took certain other things away like the ability to torture others, I wouldn't particularly care. At present, I'm unable to go anywhere I want any time I want, because of limits placed on my transportation. I cannot exercise my free will to be anywhere I want at any time, so why is it important that I have the opportunity to exercise my free will to kill someone, and make living hell for other people?
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