I’m not going to say suffering is good, but the avoidance of suffering has historically been quite a significant driver for the advancement of science etc; maybe the development of intelligence itself - if you remove suffering, you either need to replace it with something else (maybe an innate, benign, strong sense of curiosity) or accept that those sentient creatures will typically stagnate.
Not to mention that the definition of suffering is relative.
For example, remove all risk, pain, fear and “suffering” from the world and you could be left with a sizeable amount of people who now find themselves completely and utterly bored. Bored to the point of insanity, are they not now suffering…
As to the OP, I just think of any time I played a computer game with cheats and with god mode activated, generally its a fun diversion for a short while but gets old pretty quickly. Without any challenge I just get bored and move on to something else.
God powers in real life would be like that, I’d just lose interest in all this boring, meaningless crap.
Although I do think that the biggest reason I’d stop caring about people is not so much the god powers, but the immortality. Even with our short lifespans its easy to get cynical about the crap human beings get up to, I’d say after a few hundred years of seeing the same crap over and over that you wouldn’t think too much of your fellow man.
For this I turn to roleplaying games. From the Shadow World Atlas Addendum, p.48:
Yes positive and negative reinforcement has played a big role in our survival. But negative reinforcement doesn’t have to come in the form of pain and suffering. Maybe negative reinforcement could come in the form of intense fatigue or just a vague sense of unpleasantness rather than acute pain and suffering.
If I had godlike powers I’d be as concerned about human life as I am about a random square centimeter of dirt in the land behind my house. However after I abolished suffering as a form of punishment I think I’d lose interest.
Global Battle Royal…fight for my amusement, puny mortals!
When I get bored of that, I’ll introduce monsters & superpowers
Sure, I think that’s what I was saying.
The problem with being omnipotent and omniscient is that, not only can you do anything instantly, you already know the exact outcome of anything that you might decide to do. You are bored from the first microsecond you get your power, and absolutely nothing can relieve that boredom.
Other than relieving yourself of the powers and wiping your memory of having had them, that is.
I tried that, and I’m still bored.
There’s a joke that goes something like:
“God, why did you give people free will?”
“I was bored.”
I really don’t think I would quit caring. I’ve always been fascinated by people, even when I can’t stand them any more, ha-ha. Seriously, people can be much more annoying/frustrating than animals, and, in that sense, I can almost understand those who prefer the company of animals. However, although I’m generally pragmatic and empirical (=not creationist), it doesn’t bother me at all when words like “divine” are used to describe the universe. The scope of the beauty and perfection that we perceive is far greater than anything human.
The thing is, nothing would mean anything if there weren’t people there to appreciate it. Like the sound of a tree falling in a forest.