(Original Source: http://sunnianswers.wordpress.com/2008/06/20/q-a-someone-asked-if-god-is-perfect-then-why-are-certain-things-for-example-the-eye-imperfect/)
Someone asked: On the point about the creator having no imperfections, how does that square with imperfections in the creation? Our eyes are wired back to front, for example, and there are other numerous biological anomalies brought about via natural selection - you may be tempted to argue that these are imperfections by design to challenge our faith or somesuch, but that’s stretching pretty far. I mean where’s the challenge? What divine test does the wiring of our eyes represent?
Someone asked: On the point about the creator having no imperfections, how does that square with imperfections in the creation? Our eyes are wired back to front, for example, and there are other numerous biological anomalies brought about via natural selection - you may be tempted to argue that these are imperfections by design to challenge our faith or somesuch, but that’s stretching pretty far. I mean where’s the challenge? What divine test does the wiring of our eyes represent?
Answer: Eyes cannot be perfect. If
they were wired as you would like, you could say why the wires? If not
the wires, you could say why can’t I see smaller things? Why can’t I see
further? The possibilities are not limited, but no matter what the
specification is, it will still be imperfect, because an eye is
something limited, no matter how powerful it is. Your request for
perfection therefore, implies that the impossible is possible. It is
like a request for a part that is larger than its whole. The question
rather becomes: “Why that limit and not another?” and the answer is
always, “It is as Allah had willed it. He willed that limit and not
another.” This has no bearing on the assertion that Allah Himself is
perfect, or on His existence. It might be a test, and it might not, but
it certainly seems that you are challenged by it in terms of faith. When
Muslims say that Allah is perfect they mean that He has no needs. This
means He has no obligations to create someone’s eye with a particular
specification, or to test someone or not test him. If you say that He
must create different wiring then you are saying that He has needs,
which contradicts perfection.
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