Ken wrote:
Excellent point! I see light as a "noun" with darkness being the absence of this noun; but I only see evil as an adjective.
RickD wrote:With statements like that, it's really no wonder why others here have difficulty talking to you Kenny.
Ken wrote:
Storyteller seems to have no problem talking to me! Do you have a problem talking to people who do not share your point of view?
Kenny,
Evil in this context, is a noun. The fact that you are denying that (for whatever reason), makes it difficult to talk to you. You are denying reality. It's difficult, if not impossible, to speak with someone whose responses aren't based on reality.
Ken wrote:
I like dictionary.com’s definition.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/evil?s=t
When used as a noun it basically uses it in reference to something else like “lesser of two evils” or evil intentions.
But it also defines evil as “a force in nature that gives rise to wickedness and sin”. This definition I disagree with. I realize dictionary.com defines words the way they are used; and many religious people use it that way.
The reason I disagree with this definition is because (according to my understanding) all the forces of nature we are familiar with are detectable by science. Science is unable to detect evil. (if they could life would be much easier; imagine if we had an evil detector sorta like a carbon monoxide detector and when an evil person like Hitler enters the room, the evil detector sounds off and everybody knows not to pay any attention to him; could have saved a lot of lives)
The fact that evil is undetectable tells me that evil does not have an actual existence like gravity, Centrifugal force, or other forces of nature.
Ken, you claim that you like dictionary.com's definition of evil. Yet you ignore the definition given(the very definition which is the proper definition for the context of this discussion!), and instead focus on a other definitions which aren't the definitions in the context of this discussion.
Here are the definitions from dictionary.com, for evil as a noun:
6.
that which is evil; evil quality, intention, or conduct:
to choose the lesser of two evils.
7.
the force in nature that governs and gives rise to wickedness and sin.
8.
the wicked or immoral part of someone or something:
The evil in his nature has destroyed the good.
9.
harm; mischief; misfortune:
to wish one evil.
10.
anything causing injury or harm:
Tobacco is considered by some to be an evil.
11.
a harmful aspect, effect, or consequence:
the evils of alcohol.
12.
a disease, as king's evil.
#8, is the definition of evil in the context of this discussion.
Please focus on that definition if you want to participate in this discussion. You can't just change the definition of a word being discussed just because you don't agree with it.