The druid Finn said:

“No bad. Only variations of good!”

 

Finn the monist druid’s minim “No bad. Only variations of good.” expresses a core claim of Procedure Monism: existence itself is already a success-state. To exist as an identifiable reality is to have successfully emerged from Nature’s universal generative procedure, and this success is what the druid Finn calls Original Goodness. This goodness is not moral, emotional, or evaluative, but purely operational: being-as-working.

Because there is only one source of emergence (Nature as Universal Procedure), absolute “bad” cannot exist. For bad to be ontologically real, it would have to oppose or originate outside this procedure, which is impossible. Every event, including those humans label as evil or tragic, already participates in the same good-generating process.

What humans call “bad” (pain, loss, death, catastrophe) is therefore not a negative principle, but constraint-friction within the good: internal strain, redistribution, or misalignment inside an already functioning system. Cancer, predation, stellar explosions, and grief are not metaphysically bad; they are shifts in procedural viability and feedback within Nature’s operation.

The (monist) druid’s view mirrors St. Augustine’s privation theory of evil, which holds that evil has no positive existence but is a lack or corruption of good. The difference is terminological, not logical: Augustine grounds goodness in God, while Finn grounds it in Nature itself. Augustine is thus not rejected but naturalised.

Pain and suffering are real at the relative, local level, but they do not undermine the absolute layer where existence itself is good. The minim is not optimism, since it makes no promise of favourable outcomes for individuals. Nature simply continues to unfold; destruction and survival are equally expressions of its operation.

In compressed form:


All existence is good because it works.
“Bad” is never a thing in itself, only a variation, distortion, or redistribution within that goodness.

 

The druid monist said: “No bad. Only variations of good!” adv.

 

The druid Finn also said:

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