• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

Skeptical theism and the evidential problem of evil

cvanwey

Well-Known Member
May 10, 2018
5,165
733
65
California
✟151,844.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Skeptic
Marital Status
Private
Haha. Persistence is your gift.



We might be at a standoff. There are worse things.

I have to ask...

If you reconcile there exists no solution to your own presented 'problem', why even bother?

I claim there is one; you claim there isn't.... You then go on to state the reasons are that we cannot possibly know, nor is this agent obligated? Which again, can be said for any fictitious made up agent.
 
Upvote 0

public hermit

social troglodyte
Site Supporter
Aug 20, 2019
12,427
13,265
East Coast
✟1,041,737.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Others
If you reconcile there exists no solution to your own presented 'problem', why even bother?

Maybe you're overstating the problem with which I am concerned on this issue. I agree with the atheist that there are instances of evil that appear gratuitous. Where we disagree is over the possibility that a tri-omni God could have reasons not available to us. In short, the appearance of gratuitous evil does not work as a defeater for my faith in God. My personal reasons for this would include more than is included in the 1st premise, so I'll have to leave it at that.

If you want to create a thread arguing that God, fairies, ghosts, and Santa Claus are all imaginary, and therefore have the exact same ontological status, epistemic abilities, and moral obligations, then I will certainly take a look at it. I promise.
 
Reactions: 2PhiloVoid
Upvote 0

cvanwey

Well-Known Member
May 10, 2018
5,165
733
65
California
✟151,844.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Skeptic
Marital Status
Private
Maybe you're overstating the problem with which I am concerned on this issue.

?

I agree with the atheist that there are instances of evil that appear gratuitous.

Okay

Where we disagree is over the possibility that a tri-omni God could have reasons not available to us.

Yes, we appear at a stale mate. If premise one stands, then to deny the human of the same, ala requested advanced knowledge for instance, remains a double-standard. Especially as soon as you begin to plug Christianity into the equation.

In short, the appearance of gratuitous evil does not work as a defeater for my faith in God.

That wouldn't be what does it for me either. Why? Because as I pointed out prior, I already disagree with some of your claimed God's moral absolute pronouncements. But if He does exist, and all said moral pronouncements do exist, my disagreement is of little/no concern or value regardless.

Furthermore, maybe God enjoys watching. Maybe this God is also going to punish me for disagreeing with Him, regardless of my rationale.


My personal reasons for this would include more than is included in the 1st premise, so I'll have to leave it at that.

Do tell. It's your thread


This reminds me of a website someone turned me onto a couple of years ago. In a nutshell, the premise is simple... What's more likely? God made us, or we 'made' god?

God is Imaginary - 50 simple proofs
 
Upvote 0

Amoranemix

Democrat
Apr 12, 2004
906
34
Belgium
✟31,446.00
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Single
I disagree. The existence of gratuitous evil needs only be probable. If the existence of gratuitous evil were certain, the the conclusion that an omnimax god does not exist would also be certain, not just probable. Weakening the second premise by making gratuitous evil merely probable, weakens the conclusion by de same degree. As a deductive argument it may not be sound, as the second premise might be false, but it is a good inductive argument, that can be rewritten as a sound deductive argment as follows :

1. If an omniscient, omnibenevolent and omnipotent god exists, no gratuitous evil exists.
2. Probably gratuitous evil exists.
3. Therefore, probably an omniscient, omnibenevolent and omnipotent god does not exist.

That appears to be a sound argument.

Defining good as function of god does not seem instructive, as it would only be telling us something about good, but not about God. Also, if you similarly define gratuituous evil as something God disapproves of, you would have no good reason to believe there is gratuitous evil.

That doesn't follow.
First, what Rowe wants to say is irrelevant. Only what he says matters.
Second, again, the argument does not mention the reasons God could have. It only makes a claim about the reasons God has.

cvnwey 51 said:
- Omnipotence means "the quality of having unlimited power, within the confines of logic"
- Omnibenevolence means "infinite 'goodness'. And by goodness, meaning whatever this agent deems 'good'."
-Omniscience means "knows everything"
It is uninformative to measure something with a measurement stick based on what you measure. When you measure a tower it won't help you to measure it to be one tower high. When morally evaluating the Nazis, you will not first ask them whether gassing Jews is good. Likewise, one should use a moral standard independent from God.
I think a better definition for omniscience would be to know everything true.

[36] I don't see why that would be an important question. A more important question is I think whether such God would communicate with humans.

However, if that omnibenevolent being is also omniscient, it would know itself to be omnibenevolent.

[37] I disagree. It makes not such assumption. It would be possible to define Goodness as being the same as God, but that would be a poor definition.

[38] How do you know the atheist believes that a tri-omni god could have no reasons not avaiable to us ?
[39] In that case, the appearance of gratuitous good does not work as a defeater for anyone's faith in Evil God.
 
Upvote 0

cvanwey

Well-Known Member
May 10, 2018
5,165
733
65
California
✟151,844.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Skeptic
Marital Status
Private
if you similarly define gratuituous evil as something God disapproves of, you would have no good reason to believe there is gratuitous evil.

The whole situation begs of the "Euthephro", as indicated a few posts later Morals may be arbitrary, if one horn in the Euthephro is true.

Also, to possibly wager the notion of "might makes right"...



Not sure where you are going here? You say what you said, and then only slightly 'adjusted' one definition?

I happily admit words are just words, and definitions can vary. These terms are defined, as we humans created them - as mere descriptors of such said attributes; (god or no god). I was attempting to establish a 'base-line', in attempt for continuance in a conversation. If you wish to augment the presented terms and engage, be my guest.

There's a thousand ways to skin a cat. There's more than one path to grandma's house. Blah... In the end however, looks as though, if one attempts to hold to premise one [entire]; it might require a bit of 'jockeying', 'rationalization', and/or 'cognitive dissonance', to continue to 'shoe horn' such a claimed God into the equation?.?.?.?
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

Amoranemix

Democrat
Apr 12, 2004
906
34
Belgium
✟31,446.00
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Single
You forgot to answer my question.

You forgot to answer my question

cvnwey 65 said:
Not sure where you are going here? You say what you said, and then only slightly 'adjusted' one definition?
The first paragraph was a criticism of the defintion for omnibenevolence. The second single-sentence paragraph was a proposal for improving the definition for omniscience.

I propose the following definition for omnibenevolence :
The unimpaired desire to maximise the well-being of the exterior world

Christians may dislike it, as that clearly does not describe Yahweh.
 
Upvote 0