The Equal Omniscience and Omnipotence Argument
The Equal Omniscience and Omnipotence Argument
Premise 1:
If a being is omniscient, it knows every possible outcome of every possible creation.
Premise 2:
If a being is omnipotent, it has the power to bring about any logically possible outcome, including the existence of beings who are equally omniscient and omnipotent.
Premise 3:
A world where all sentient beings are equally omniscient and omnipotent would contain no involuntary suffering, no vulnerability, and no inequality, since each being could prevent harm to itself and others.
Premise 4:
A perfectly omnibenevolent being necessarily prefers the outcome that maximizes well-being and minimizes suffering.
Premise 5:
Creating vulnerable, ignorant, and powerless sentient beings when one could instead create equally omniscient and omnipotent beings knowingly introduces avoidable suffering.
Premise 6:
Knowingly introducing avoidable suffering contradicts omnibenevolence.
Conclusion 1:
If a deity created sentient beings who suffer, that deity either lacked the knowledge, the power, or the will to prevent that suffering.
Conclusion 2:
Therefore, such a deity cannot be simultaneously omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent.
1. If God could have made all beings equally omniscient and omnipotent but did not, God is not omnibenevolent.
2. If God wanted to but could not, God is not omnipotent.
3. If God did not know such a creation was possible, God is not omniscient.
Therefore, a being responsible for preventable suffering cannot be all three at once.
Premise 1:
If a being is omniscient, it knows every possible outcome of every possible creation.
Premise 2:
If a being is omnipotent, it has the power to bring about any logically possible outcome, including the existence of beings who are equally omniscient and omnipotent.
Premise 3:
A world where all sentient beings are equally omniscient and omnipotent would contain no involuntary suffering, no vulnerability, and no inequality, since each being could prevent harm to itself and others.
Premise 4:
A perfectly omnibenevolent being necessarily prefers the outcome that maximizes well-being and minimizes suffering.
Premise 5:
Creating vulnerable, ignorant, and powerless sentient beings when one could instead create equally omniscient and omnipotent beings knowingly introduces avoidable suffering.
Premise 6:
Knowingly introducing avoidable suffering contradicts omnibenevolence.
Conclusion 1:
If a deity created sentient beings who suffer, that deity either lacked the knowledge, the power, or the will to prevent that suffering.
Conclusion 2:
Therefore, such a deity cannot be simultaneously omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent.
1. If God could have made all beings equally omniscient and omnipotent but did not, God is not omnibenevolent.
2. If God wanted to but could not, God is not omnipotent.
3. If God did not know such a creation was possible, God is not omniscient.
Therefore, a being responsible for preventable suffering cannot be all three at once.
Comments (119)
You've defined 3 impossible terms. Lets tweak them a bit.
Omniscient - A being which knows what can possibly be known.
Omnipotent - A being which is as powerful as a being can possibly be.
Omnibenevolent - A being which is as good as a being can possibly be.
Now the contradiction goes away. Define impossible terms and you get impossible results.
Likewise, “as powerful as a being can possibly be” is circular. Possible given what? If a world without suffering is logically possible, then failing to create such a world shows a lack of either power, knowledge, or will. If it’s not possible, then reality itself imposes limits on this being, meaning omnipotence was never real to begin with.
And morally, the issue doesn’t go away. Even if this being is “as good as possible,” if it foresaw preventable suffering and chose to allow it, then by any coherent moral standard, it’s not maximally good. If goodness allows needless agony, the word loses meaning.
So, redefining the terms doesn’t eliminate the contradiction - it just concedes that the traditional “all-knowing, all-powerful, all-good” God can’t exist without being reinterpreted as a finite or morally compromised one.
Correct. Thus, the problem is solved. No being can be unlimited. The lesson is to ensure that one's definitions do not cross into impossible territory. Whenever listening to anyone's proposed terms, one should first evaluate whether the terms are logical in themselves before accepting them as true.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Given the limits of reality. We don't know those limits, so putting them forth is futile.
Quoting Truth Seeker
We do not know this. It may not be possible.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Even if it were possible, omnipotence defined as "All powerful" is impossible. The term itself results in the ability to not contradict when a contradiction occurs. There are limits to everything.
Quoting Truth Seeker
If it foresaw unnecessary suffering, had the power to do something about it, and suffering was truthfully evil in this instance, then we can imagine a better being existing because there are humans who would do something about that. Meaning you haven't made a contradiction, you've simply yet to describe the the most benevolent being that has the power to prevent 'evil'.
Quoting Truth Seeker
It doesn't have to be that a God is morally compromised. It simply means if you are going to describe a God with impossible terms, you're going to get an impossible conclusion. The only realistic way to describe a God is with realistic terms.
(2020) my two shekels ...
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/506435
Imperfection is better than perfection.
Knowledge creates the unknown.
If you concede that omnipotence and omniscience are impossible, then you’re agreeing that the classical God concept is self-contradictory. That’s not a solution to the problem of evil - it’s the abandonment of classical theism. You’re left with a finite, naturalistic being operating within the limits of reality - powerful perhaps, but not divine in any ultimate sense.
Saying “we don’t know if a world without suffering is possible” also doesn’t rescue the theistic claim. Theists don’t usually portray God as uncertain about metaphysical possibilities; they claim that God created all metaphysical possibilities. If suffering is built into reality’s fabric, then God either designed it that way (which contradicts perfect goodness) or lacked the power to design differently (which contradicts omnipotence).
Regarding your point that omnipotence itself is impossible: if so, then every theology that attributes omnipotence to God collapses into incoherence. The “lesson” here isn’t to adjust definitions but to recognize that the very concept of an all-powerful, all-good, all-knowing deity fails under logical and moral analysis.
So yes - I agree that redefining God with “realistic terms” avoids contradiction. But what you’re describing then is not the God of classical monotheism; it’s a finite being within a constrained universe. In that case, the argument doesn’t refute my point - it confirms it.
“Imperfection is better than perfection” is self-contradictory unless you redefine “better.” Better than what? If something is better, that means it surpasses another state, implying a standard of perfection that it moves closer to. You can’t coherently claim imperfection is superior to perfection without hollowing out the meaning of both terms.
“Knowledge creates the unknown” is a poetic statement, but epistemologically false. Knowledge reduces the unknown; ignorance is what creates it. Expanding understanding reveals new questions, yes - but that’s a deepening of knowledge, not a return to ignorance.
So all three claims rely on romantic inversions of meaning rather than reasoned argument. They sound mystical, but once unpacked, they offer no coherent defence of suffering or imperfection.
What is your evidence to the contrary? You can claim the meaning of words as evidence, but then you are retreating from factuality yourself. But there is a religious tradition of asceticism that is by no means romantic, that regards voluntary privation as a spiritual discipline, and even mere athletes regard pain as a barrier to be overcome.
Likewise physicists often say that the more one knows the more one is aware of the extent of one's ignorance. In the case of God, He is a simple. He can know everything, but he can also create the unknown-to-Himself. He can hide things from himself, just as you can shut your eyes to some things.
For God, to create is necessarily to create the ungodly, that is creation. Creation is lesser than the creator and thus imperfect. But though imperfect and superfluous, creation adds something to the perfection that is God.
But let me tell you my position. My real claim is that reality cannot be constrained by words. If there is God, words cannot force him out of existence, and if there is no God, words cannot argue Him into existence. So a careful truth seeker will not try to prove with words the existence or non-existence of anything, but will be content to say merely that they have had no experience and found no evidence of God, unless and until they have had such experience or evidence.
Correct, but any good thinker and philosopher is not going to take the low hanging fruit. They're going to be charitable to ideas they don't like themselves. This is a problem that is easily solved by high schoolers (I know, I was in high school when I first encountered it), and so we have to ask why its stuck around so persistently.
One thing to realize is that if you hold impossible terms, its also impossible to counter someone who believes in them. "Can God create a rock so big even he can't lift it?" Sure, he made himself a man, now he can't lift it. The realm of impossibility is the realm of imagination and child play. It is literally child's play to take your contradiction and simply ignore it because 'unlimited' means I can ignore your contradiction.
If you're accepting that impossible terms can exist and be considered, you're going to end up not winning. Because you haven't proven that impossible terms are impossible, you've only proved a contradiction through some word play to someone who believes in impossibility. Notice how you can point out a contradiction that can be realized in high school and yet there are hundreds of millions of people who still believe in a God? Crowing over a simple contradiction while it changes no one is foolish. You have to think deeper than that. And part of that is being kind to your opponents viewpoint.
If instead you can get the other person to think, "The way to solve the contradiction reasonably instead of simply brushing it off, is to revise the terms to be reasonable," now you have something. You're being charitable. "Couldn't it be," you say, "that people thousands of years ago were simply defining the terms as exaggerations, but really when we examine the word carefully it makes more sense to think in them this way?" NOW you've got the other person thinking. Most people will think, "Yeah, that makes sense." You haven't disproved God, but you were never going to do that anyway. You're doing one better. You've gotten them away from thinking in impossible terms, and now thinking in possible terms.
This is the difference between a person who has a goal of convincing someone of a particular assertion, and instead gets a person to think in a more rational way. That's the goal. Get a person to start thinking rationally and then you can have a reasonable discussion. Meet the person you're talking with half way. Try to see what they want, find what is irrational, then try to shape it in the most rational way from what they want. Then you can take the next step and demonstrate how the next steps of rationality do not lead to a particular conclusion.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Incorrect. You're simply setting "The divine" in terms of "The real" instead of the imaginary. Again, if your goal is to invalidate theism with "The problem of Evil", an ancient and basic argument, hundreds of millions of people will show you its a fools errand. You cannot convince someone of something rational if they aren't already thinking in rational terms. You aren't going to invalidate their faith, so do one better. Get them to think in rational terms. You're not invalidating theism, you're reshaping it to be in the realm of reasonability first. Then you might have a chance.
If it could be proved to you, right now, that at one point in the past you'd suffered terrible hardship but a) had completely forgotten it, and b) suffered no ongoing ill effects, would you regard that situation as in any way a misfortune? Would there be anything there to regret or deplore?
Under the previous assumptions/definitions, there could be multiple omniscient beings, but what would happen if two omnipotent sentient beings wanted to prevent harm on different ways? Doesn't seem logically possible unless you also assume that such beings will always agree on everything (maybe so if omniscient). But that additional assumption would have all sorts of implications - e.g., lack of free will. Yes/no?
This is not necessarily true. It depends on what your definition of “omniscient” is. It might just mean knowledge of everything the way it is right now. If the universe is not determinate, an omniscient entity might not be able to know the future.
This highlights the fact that your whole argument is about language and not about reality.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Again, this comes down to the meaning of the word “omnipotent” which you’ve defined as having “the power to bring about any logically possible outcome.” it really doesn’t make much sense to me.
Quoting Truth Seeker
This doesn’t strike me as necessarily true.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Again, I don’t see why this is necessarily true.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Again, again, I don’t see this as necessarily true either.
Quoting Truth Seeker
In summary—your argument strikes me as the kind of argument someone who doesn’t have a good grasp on what omniscience, omnipotence, and benevolence mean. To be fair, I know you’re not the one who started this particular way of seeing things. It’s been around for centuries.
Free will seems relevant to the argument.
You say that because believers can simply ignore contradictions, pointing them out is “child’s play.” Yet that concedes the central issue: classical theism defines God using mutually incompatible attributes. This isn’t “word-play”; it’s conceptual analysis. If someone insists square circles exist, the error isn’t solved by saying we should make the term “square circle” more reasonable. The original concept collapses from within.
Your approach — encouraging believers to reinterpret omni-attributes in weaker, more realistic ways — is fine as a pastoral strategy, but it is not a defense of classical theism. It is a revision of it. And that distinction matters.
If omnipotence is no longer literally unlimited, if omniscience is no longer exhaustive knowledge of all truths, and if omnibenevolence must be scaled to finite capacities, then the “problem of evil” doesn’t just disappear — the theory has changed. The contradiction isn’t being solved; the definition is being replaced.
That is exactly what I stated: once the terms are naturalised, we no longer have the God of classical theism but a finite, contingent agent operating within the constraints of reality. There’s nothing wrong with that move — but it is a retreat from the original claim.
And that is the core point:
The problem of evil exposes the incoherence of the classical theological package.
If the solution is to abandon the classical attributes, then the problem has done its job.
You say, “Get them to think rationally first.” I agree entirely. But rational analysis of the omni-attributes leads precisely to the conclusion I drew: no being can be unlimited, and any coherent “God” must therefore be finite. Once that is admitted, the classical theistic problem isn’t “solved”; it is dissolved because the system has been replaced.
In other words:
The “high school contradiction” stays undefeated.
The revision you propose amounts to non-classical theism.
Charity does not require accepting impossible definitions.
A concept that must be rewritten to avoid contradiction has already failed on its own terms.
If someone wants to believe in a powerful, limited, non-omni agent, that’s a separate discussion. But it is not the God of historical Christianity, Islam, or Judaism — and the problem of evil was specifically aimed at that God.
1. Subjective misfortune — how suffering feels to the sufferer while it is happening.
2. Objective misfortune — whether it is bad in itself that conscious beings undergo intense suffering, regardless of what they later remember.
Your question focuses only on memory, but memory is irrelevant to whether the suffering was bad while it occurred. Pain does not become retroactively good, harmless, or morally justified just because the victim later forgets it.
If I were tortured and then had my memory wiped, three things would still be true:
1. I really suffered.
2. The suffering was intrinsically harmful while I was experiencing it.
3. A morally perfect being permitting it would still need a justification at the time it occurred.
Forgetting trauma does not erase the ethical problem — it erases the awareness of it. But morality is about what happens to beings while they are conscious, not merely about what they later recall.
If your theodicy were valid, then the following would be acceptable:
All suffering in the world, including genocide and torture, would be “not a misfortune” if victims were later forced to forget it.
A morally perfect God could allow unlimited agony as long as everyone’s memory was erased afterward.
The moral relevance of suffering would depend entirely on later cognitive states instead of the suffering itself.
That is intuitively and ethically implausible.
Even if I forget my suffering, the moral status of the event is unchanged:
it was still suffering, and a morally perfect being with unlimited power who allows preventable suffering still faces the problem of evil.
So the proposed theodicy doesn’t answer the challenge — it sidesteps it by appealing to amnesia.
And if we try to generalise the idea (e.g., earthly suffering is “forgotten” in heaven), we still have the same problem:
The world contains horrific amounts of suffering right now.
A being who is both omnipotent and omnibenevolent would prevent that suffering at the time it occurs, not repair it or wipe memories later.
Retroactive consolation cannot justify present preventable harm.
omnipotence does not imply the capacity to perform logical contradictions.
Two points address your concern:
1. Omniscient beings would not disagree, because disagreement depends on ignorance.
Disagreement arises only when at least one party lacks some relevant knowledge. If two beings possess identical, complete, and perfect knowledge:
They know every fact.
They know all causal consequences.
They know all values, preferences, and outcomes.
They know what course of action is best, all things considered.
In that case, disagreement is impossible - not because their “free will” is removed, but because the reasons for choice are perfectly understood by both.
You only disagree when you don’t know something, or when you’re mistaken about a fact or value. With no ignorance, there is nothing to disagree about.
So:
Multiple omniscient beings would converge on the same optimal action because they share the same full information set.
This is not a limitation on free will; it’s a consequence of perfect rational clarity.
2. Omnipotence constrained by logic is not a defect; it is definitional.
The traditional understanding of omnipotence excludes logical contradictions - no “square circles,” no “married bachelors,” and no mutually incompatible states of the world.
Thus:
Two omnipotent beings cannot simultaneously will contradictory states, because contradictions are not objects of power.
Preventing suffering is not contradictory.
Preventing and not preventing suffering simultaneously is.
If two truly omniscient beings know exactly the consequences of every possible action, they would see:
Which intervention produces a world with least suffering.
Which choice is morally optimal.
Which action aligns with perfect rational insight.
Given identical perfect knowledge, they will inevitably choose identically. Not because their freedom is removed, but because freedom does not require irrational divergence.
3. Therefore: multiple omniscient, omnipotent beings can coexist without conflict.
No disagreement ? no contradictory acts
No contradictory acts ? no logical impossibility
No logical impossibility ? coexistence is coherent
And because each could prevent all harm to itself and others, involuntary suffering would still be impossible in such a world.
This reinforces my original argument:
A world with equal maximal power and knowledge contains no preventable suffering.
The only worlds containing involuntary suffering are those with unequal capacities or insufficient knowledge.
Thus, the problem of evil persists for classical theism, because an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-benevolent being could trivially create the suffering-free world that multiple coequal omni-beings would themselves inhabit.
1. “Omniscience might only mean knowing everything right now.”
If omniscience is defined as “knows all facts about the present moment”, then the being is not omniscient, it is simply very well-informed, and the traditional attribute of foreknowledge disappears.
That’s not a criticism of my argument; it’s an abandonment of classical theism.
The God described in Christianity, Islam, and Judaism absolutely is defined as knowing all truths - past, present, and future. Your alternative definition is too weak to capture what the doctrine actually asserts.
If someone wants to redefine omniscience as “limited snapshot awareness,” that’s fine - but then the problem of evil doesn’t apply, because the doctrine being examined has changed.
This illustrates my point, not yours.
2. “Omnipotence defined as ability to realize any logically possible outcome doesn’t make sense to me.”
This is the standard philosophical definition, used precisely because it avoids paradoxes like “square circles” or “rocks too heavy to lift.”
If you reject the standard definition, you need to supply your own:
Does omnipotence include the power to do contradictions?
If yes ? the term becomes meaningless and cannot be reasoned about.
If no ? you’ve returned to the standard definition without realizing it.
There is no viable third option.
3. “A world of co-omnipotent, co-omniscient beings need not lack suffering.”
On what basis?
If each being:
knows every threat, every causal chain, every detail of harm in advance, and
has the power to prevent all harm to itself and others,
then the only way suffering could still occur is if:
1. they choose to allow it (contradicting omnibenevolence), or
2. their omniscience or omnipotence is incomplete.
In either case, classical omni-properties collapse.
You can’t keep the omni-attributes and the suffering at the same time.
4. “An omnibenevolent being wouldn’t necessarily minimize suffering.”
Then what does “omnibenevolent” mean?
If it does not entail preferring the best possible state of affairs, then the word loses any usable content.
If it does entail that preference, then my argument stands.
You can’t simultaneously:
affirm omnibenevolence
deny that it prefers maximal flourishing
and still be using the term meaningfully.
5. “A deity might cause suffering even if it is all-knowing, all-powerful, and perfectly good.”
Only by redefining one or more of those attributes into trivialities.
The classical formulation - used for centuries by theologians - holds:
an omniscient being knows all consequences,
an omnipotent being can prevent any avoidable harm,
an omnibenevolent being desires the best possible outcome for all.
From these three premises, the conclusion follows:
If preventable suffering exists, at least one of the three attributes is not present.
If you deny the conclusion, you must revise one or more of the attributes.
But that revision is exactly my point: classical theism becomes internally inconsistent.
6. “Your argument is just about language.”
No - language is how we make concepts precise.
If a doctrine relies on self-contradictory concepts, the contradiction lies in the doctrine, not the analysis.
Saying “these concepts don’t make sense” is not a refutation of my argument; it is a concession that the omni-triad as traditionally formulated is incoherent.
If your position is:
“Omniscience, omnipotence, and omnibenevolence are unclear or incoherent concepts,”
then we are in agreement.
But that means the traditional God-concept collapses, because classical theism requires these attributes to be meaningful, coherent, and jointly applicable.
You haven’t challenged the internal logic of the argument - you’ve challenged the concepts themselves.
And challenging the concepts is fine, but it supports my conclusion:
The omni-triad is incoherent as traditionally defined, and revising the definitions fundamentally abandons classical theism.
When I run the thought experiment on myself, try as I may, I can't make myself believe that forgotten (and consequence-less) suffering matters. To whom? But then I'm stopping at the subjective, as you clearly are not. I think different people will have different intuitions about this.
1. what is logically possible,
2. what is consistent with the omni-attributes, and
3. what is compatible with free will as typically defined.
Let me go through your points one by one.
1. Why not assume the created beings are omnibenevolent too?
You absolutely can include omnibenevolence.
And doing so strengthens the argument rather than weakening it, because:
An omniscient being knows all consequences of its actions.
An omnipotent being can actualize any logically possible benevolent outcome.
An omnibenevolent being necessarily prefers the morally best possible outcome.
Therefore, omniscient + omnipotent + omnibenevolent creatures would:
foresee all possible harms,
be able to prevent all harms,
wish to prevent all harms,
and thus
no involuntary suffering would occur in such a world.
So adding omnibenevolence makes the conclusion even more airtight.
2. Is it logically possible for created beings to be omni?
Yes — if we are using the classical definitions.
The only properties logically excluded from omnipotence are contradictions (e.g., square circles).
Nothing contradictory is involved in these three propositions:
“X knows everything that can be known.”
“X can do everything that is logically possible.”
“X always wills the best possible state of affairs.”
These are definitional claims, not metaphysical constraints.
If God cannot create a being equal in knowledge, power, and goodness, then God is not omnipotent.
That alone collapses classical omnipotence.
So either:
it is possible, and suffering disappears, or
it is impossible, and omnipotence is abandoned.
Both directions undermine classical theism.
3. What about the possibility of an omni-being “inclined towards ill”?
This suggestion is actually incoherent.
If a being is:
omniscient ? it knows the full moral truth, the full consequences, and what maximizes well-being;
omnipotent ? it can realize the morally optimal outcome;
omnibenevolent ? it prefers the morally optimal outcome;
then being “inclined towards ill” is a contradiction in terms.
Malice requires either:
1. ignorance (not omniscience),
2. weakness (not omnipotence), or
3. moral defect (not omnibenevolence).
You cannot combine perfect knowledge + perfect power + perfect goodness with “inclined toward ill.”
That is as contradictory as “omniscient but mistaken” or “omnipotent but helpless.”
So the case you raise is only possible if one or more omni-attributes fail.
4. Free will does not rescue classical theism
Classical free will requires:
the ability to choose otherwise,
under conditions of incomplete information,
with limited causal power.
But beings who are omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent cannot:
be uncertain about outcomes,
be unable to bring about the best outcome,
prefer a worse outcome.
So the typical libertarian notion of free will is logically incompatible with the omni-attributes.
Moreover, even if you introduce free will in a weaker form, the problem remains:
A creator who is omniscient and omnipotent knowingly creates agents who will cause catastrophic suffering when the creator could have created equally powerful, equally knowledgeable, equally benevolent agents who cause none.
Thus free will does not offer an escape; it merely highlights that the suffering is:
foreknown, foreseeable, preventable, not prevented, and therefore inconsistent with omnibenevolence.
Adding omnibenevolence strengthens the argument.
Creating omni-creatures is logically possible unless omnipotence is abandoned.
An omni-being cannot be “inclined toward ill” without contradiction.
Free will does not salvage the omni-triad; it makes preventable suffering even more ethically damning.
But the moment we ask, “To whom does forgotten suffering matter?” we’ve already moved off-track. The question isn’t:
Does the later version of the person remember it?
but
Was a conscious subject harmed at the time the suffering existed?
A few points sharpen this:
1. Subjective suffering is intrinsically bad at the moment it is experienced.
If a mind is enduring agony, that state is bad for that mind right then, regardless of whether a future self remembers it.
Memory is a later cognitive state.
Suffering is a present experiential state.
One cannot retroactively change the valence of the earlier conscious experience.
This is why the ethical weight doesn’t depend on identity persistence.
2. Ethical evaluation depends on what happened, not on what is later remembered.
If someone were tortured and their memory wiped, we would not say:
“No harm occurred.”
“There is nothing to regret ethically.”
“It’s morally identical to no torture ever happening.”
We would say:
A conscious being was harmed, and that matters even if forgotten.
The moral status of an event is determined at the time it occurs, not by the cognitive condition of the survivor.
3. Your intuition tracks current psychological impact, not moral relevance.
You say:
“I can't make myself believe that forgotten suffering matters. To whom?”
You mean:
“It no longer matters to me psychologically today.”
And that is true. If I forget an event, I am unaffected today.
But “who is affected now?” is the wrong metric for moral evaluation.
Ethics is concerned with:
Was a sentient being harmed during the period in which it was experiencing harm?
The answer is yes, always, independent of memory.
Present you may not care.
But the relevant subject — past you — did care while the suffering was happening.
And morality cares about the subject at the moment it is harmed, not only about the aftermath.
4. If forgotten suffering “doesn’t matter,” monstrous implications follow.
Your view implies:
Torture is morally neutral if we erase memories afterward.
Permanent amnesia would ethically sanitize any atrocity.
The moral weight of suffering = the durability of memory, not the intensity of pain.
No serious moral framework accepts that.
If a theodicy relies on memory erasure to justify suffering, it’s effectively saying:
“God can permit any amount of agony as long as He later wipes it from your mind.”
But that justifies everything, including the worst horrors imaginable.
A theory that justifies everything justifies nothing.
5. Intuitions differ, but reasons do not.
Yes, people may differ in intuitions about identity and memory.
But the reasons cut one way:
Suffering is bad during the moment of conscious experience.
Memory does not retroactively alter the moral quality of past events.
A perfectly benevolent, omnipotent, omniscient being would prevent the suffering at the time it occurs.
A theodicy that relies on memory erasure collapses into moral nihilism.
Even if your emotional intuitions don’t fire on forgotten pain, the ethical logic remains clear.
Here is a thought experiment: would parents be morally responsible for their adult child's actions if they foresaw, but did not will or cause, that the child would do something morally wrong? If so, why are they morally responsible for another agent's free actions?
You perhaps know that this "heaven theodicy" is found in Kant (in the 2nd critique, I believe, though I can't cite the section), and your post prompted me to look back at some old notes and see whether Kant's version can stand up. Rereading, I saw that Kant frames the problem a little differently. For him, what's required of God is not the usual trio of omniscience, omnipotence, and omni-benevolence, but rather that he grant all humans eternal happiness. As long as he does this, he satisfies the requirements for a maximally moral being. And this, for Kant, can be done even if there is temporary suffering. So it's not exactly a traditional theodicy. And it raises interesting questions about what "heavenly happiness" would be. If it's meant to be a perfection, a state than which there is no better, then quite possibly I might agree, once I experience it, that I couldn't possibly be any happier even if I hadn't suffered on Earth. So the amnesia postulate may not even be necessary.
Do you think it makes a difference, then, if "perfect happiness" is substituted for "no suffering"? And can you accept the idea that such a perfect happiness might be consistent with having previously suffered? I guess part of the perfection would involve a realization that the past no longer matters, not just subjectively, but ethically.
Your logic seems reasonable, but a theist will see an escape hatch between these 2 premises:
[i]Premise 3:A world where all sentient beings are equally omniscient and omnipotent would contain no involuntary suffering, no vulnerability, and no inequality, since each being could prevent harm to itself and others.
Premise 4:A perfectly omnibenevolent being necessarily prefers the outcome that maximizes well-being and minimizes suffering.[/i]
A theist could reason, that this "god" considers there to be some benefit to having beings who are not omnipotent/omniscient but must actually struggle with their choices. This forces them to have to earn their reward. Compare this to a child who has to do the work to achieve some goal, vs the child whose parents give him everything. Or there's always the old excuse "we mere mortals aren't equipped to understand God's reasons".
Once those differences are restored, the analogy collapses.
Let me explain clearly.
1. Creation does entail responsibility when the creator designs the agent’s nature, selects all initial conditions, foreknows every consequence, controls all causal factors, has unlimited power to intervene, and has omnibenevolent motivation.
If you create the entire causal history, foresee every outcome, and have the power to prevent harm, then you are morally responsible for preventable harm.
Parents do not satisfy any of these conditions.
God, by definition, does.
So the question “why would God be responsible?” is answered by the very omni-attributes classical theism assigns to God.
2. The parent analogy quietly removes omnipotence and omniscience
Parents cannot choose every gene their child receives, control every environmental factor, prevent all harms, foresee all actions with certainty, guarantee that their child will not commit evil, and shape the child’s will infallibly.
If they could do all that, then they would be responsible if they knowingly brought a dangerous person into existence.
So the analogy works only by stripping the relevant power away. But you cannot strip power away from God without denying omnipotence.
3. If parents were omnipotent and omniscient, they would be responsible.
Let’s revise your thought experiment to include the classical attributes:
Suppose parents can design their child’s psychology perfectly.
Suppose they know infallibly exactly what their child will do.
Suppose they could prevent any harmful act effortlessly.
Suppose they choose to create the child anyway, knowing the exact future harms.
In that scenario, yes - they would be morally responsible.
Not for the child’s freedom, but for creating a being they knew would cause suffering when they could have prevented it entirely.
Once you restore the omni-attributes, the analogy actually supports the problem of evil.
4. Free will does not erase responsibility when the creator designed the will
Free will only reduces responsibility when:
the agent’s capacity for action was not designed by the creator
the creator did not foresee the outcomes
the creator could not prevent them
But if the creator:
designed the agent’s cognitive architecture
knew exactly how it would behave
could prevent any negative outcome
chose to create it anyway
then free will does not shield the creator from moral responsibility.
Classical theism makes God responsible by definition.
5. The decisive point: Preventable suffering is still preventable
Even if a creature freely chooses evil:
God knew this in advance.
God could have prevented the creature’s existence.
God could have given the creature a better nature.
God could intervene at any moment to stop harm, but God doesn’t.
A being with unlimited power, knowledge, and goodness who allows preventable suffering is responsible for that suffering.
Parents are not.
God, if classical theism is true, is.
Your analogy only works by reducing God to a powerless bystander. But a being who lacks causal responsibility, foresight, and the power to prevent harm is not the God of classical theism.
Restore the omni-attributes, and creation does entail moral responsibility - unavoidably.
Let me go through your questions directly.
1. Does perfect future happiness offset past suffering?
No, not in any ethical sense that concerns a maximally moral being.
Two reasons:
(a) Compensation ? justification
Compensating someone after harm does not retroactively make the harm morally permissible.
If I torture someone today but give them infinite bliss tomorrow, the torture was still wrong while it happened.
My later generosity doesn’t erase my earlier responsibility.
Kant’s view addresses the ultimate fate of moral agents, but not the moral status of God’s permission of preventable suffering.
(b) A perfect being would not use “future bliss” to excuse preventable suffering
A maximally moral being doesn’t choose a worse path when a better one is available.
If God can create:
a world where someone suffers and then receives perfect happiness, or
a world where they receive perfect happiness without suffering,
then, the second is the morally superior option.
Choosing the first is inconsistent with moral perfection.
2. Is “perfect happiness” compatible with having suffered in the past?
Psychologically, yes; ethically, only if the suffering was necessary for the good achieved.
But in Kant’s model, the suffering is not necessary, because:
God could grant perfect happiness without first permitting horrors.
Perfect happiness does not depend logically on prior suffering.
Moral development does not require cruelty.
So even if I eventually feel no distress about the past, the God who permitted unnecessary suffering acted suboptimally.
Subjective acceptance does not erase objective responsibility.
3. Does “the past no longer matter ethically” make sense?
No, because:
Ethical valuation is time-indexed.
A state of affairs is morally evaluated when it occurs, not in light of later memory or reinterpretation.
For example:
A child’s suffering in 500 BCE has the same moral status whether or not it is later “redeemed” in an afterlife.
Divine compensation does not transform cruelty into goodness.
To say “the past no longer matters ethically” is to say the suffering had no moral weight at the moment it occurred - a view that collapses into moral nihilism.
In perfect happiness, I may not care about my past suffering, but what I feel in heaven does not determine the ethical status of past events.
A satisfied victim does not exonerate a negligent creator.
4. The deeper issue: Kant trades benevolence for a cosmic compensation scheme
Kant solves the problem only by weakening what “maximally moral” means.
He says:
God must guarantee ultimate happiness
But need not prevent earthly suffering
But that is already a concession:
It abandons omnibenevolence.
It abandons moral perfection as traditionally understood.
It transforms God into a cosmic compensator, not a cosmic protector.
That is closer to a bureaucrat than an omnibenevolent creator.
5. Why Kant’s move doesn’t help with the classical problem of evil
Even if:
I end up perfectly happy, and I no longer mind my past suffering, and I see it as irrelevant, the central problem remains:
A morally perfect, omniscient, omnipotent being knowingly allowed preventable suffering that achieved no necessary good.
Compensation is not justification.
A God who could have prevented a child’s agony but didn’t is not morally perfect, regardless of the afterlife.
Perfect happiness later does not make preventable suffering now morally acceptable.
A maximally moral being would choose the world with perfect happiness and no unnecessary suffering.
“The past doesn’t matter ethically” cannot be defended without erasing the moral weight of suffering entirely.
Kant’s solution is elegant, but ultimately it changes what “moral perfection” means.
The classical problem of evil remains intact.
1. “God prefers beings who must struggle and earn their reward.”
This sounds plausible until you ask one simple question:
Why would a morally perfect being prefer a world with preventable suffering over one without it?
Two problems emerge immediately:
(a) If the suffering is unnecessary for moral growth, then permitting it is immoral.
If God could achieve the same virtues, character, or meaning without allowing children to be burned, starved, tortured, or raped, then permitting such suffering is morally indefensible.
A good parent does not orchestrate horrors to “build character.”
(b) If the suffering is necessary for virtue, then God’s omnipotence fails.
If God needs suffering to achieve a certain good, then that good is not logically achievable without suffering.
But omnipotence, by definition, includes the ability to achieve any logically possible good without collateral damage.
So either:
God is not omnipotent, or
virtue that requires torture and famine is not worth calling “virtue.”
This is the classic “soul-making theodicy collapses omnipotence” problem.
2. “Struggle makes the reward meaningful.”
(John Hick’s soul-making answer)
Even if struggle adds meaning, the argument breaks for three reasons:
(a) Meaning can be achieved without involuntary agony.
Challenge does not require cancer, earthquakes, pedophilia, or genocides.
It can be achieved through freely chosen effort, not imposed horror.
(b) Many victims do not survive long enough to “grow.”
Millions of infants die in agony.
What virtue did they learn?
What struggle did they “earn their reward” through?
Most suffering in the world has no soul-making payoff at all.
(c) If the reward is infinite, no finite struggle is required.
If infinite bliss awaits, the smallest amount of suffering is ethically unnecessary - unless God needs to torture creatures to make Himself look generous.
That is not moral perfection.
3. “We are not equipped to understand God’s reasons.”
(The fallback appeal to mystery)
This argument collapses into incoherence for four reasons:
(a) If you can’t understand God’s reasons, you have no grounds to call Him good.
You can’t simultaneously say:
“God’s goodness is beyond our understanding,”
and also
“God is morally perfect.”
If the concept of goodness is unintelligible, the praise is meaningless.
(b) If God’s ways are inscrutable, then every possible world is compatible with His goodness.
A world full of torture? God has a “mysterious reason.”
A world with no suffering? Same reason.
A world where He does the opposite of His commandments? Still mysterious.
A theory that explains everything explains nothing.
(c) If we cannot judge God’s actions, we cannot judge God’s commands.
If “God’s morality is unknowable,” then:
You cannot say “God is good.”
You cannot say “God is worthy of worship.”
You cannot say “God’s commands are moral.”
You cannot say “God does not lie.”
You cannot say “God does not deceive.”
If God’s moral logic is incomprehensible, then everything about Him becomes epistemically inaccessible.
Hence, theistic morality collapses.
(d) “Mystery” is indistinguishable from admitting defeat.
Once you allow “maybe God has a reason we can’t grasp,” you have blocked all possible refutation - not by solving the argument, but by abandoning rational analysis.
At that point, you’ve given up on philosophical theism and retreated into fideism.
4. The core point the theist cannot escape
Even if God wants “growth,” “struggle,” “earned reward,” or “meaning,” an omnipotent God could create a world that achieves all those good things without:
genocide,
starvation,
rape,
childhood leukemia,
parasitic worms eating children’s eyes,
billions of years of animal suffering,
natural disasters,
and every form of preventable agony.
If God permits suffering that He could prevent without losing any greater good, then He is not omnibenevolent.
If He cannot prevent it, He is not omnipotent.
If He does not foresee it, He is not omniscient.
The escape hatch closes.
“Struggle builds character” ? implies God needs suffering ? contradicts omnipotence.
“The reward is earned” ? implies virtue is impossible without horrors ? incoherent.
“We can't understand God’s ways” ? collapses all theistic moral claims.
No theistic move preserves the omni-triad.
If I may, I'd like to look at this through the lens of a materialistic, and pantheistic, point-of-view. Consider that all that exists contains all the knowledge and all the power needed to keep the universe going.
I do notice that you mention "beings" and "sentient beings" in your OP - but must omniscience and omnipotence be restricted to them?
I think it might be rightly concluded that all that exists is omniscient and omnipotent.
Now to the question of benevolence - I think this is a man-made concept, rather anthropomorphic, and not an accurate reflection of reality. Reality doesn't operate according to better or worse, but just what is. Same holds true for nature, for example with the theory of evolution - which has no end goals, but is a progression of complex chemistry to produce the best suited to live in a particular environment.
And so, in a pantheistic worldview - "God" (i.e. all of creation) would be omniscient and omnipotent, but the notions of good and evil do not enter into the equation. All is merely what it is.
Are we currently operating with that definition, or is free will now determined by one's nature or cognitive architecture?
That's probably true, but these discussions do show that the classical problem isn't necessarily the only way to frame our understanding of God and evil. What I'm going to take away from the discussion is the thought that, when it comes to human suffering, subjective experience and judgment may carry a lot more ethical weight than it would first appear, from a strictly rationalist perspective. See: justice vs. mercy.
Appreciate your work on this.
Redefining omniscience and omnipotence as impersonal properties of “all that exists” strips them of agency, intentionality, and moral relevance. What remains is causal completeness, not a morally accountable God.
Once benevolence is dismissed as anthropomorphic, suffering no longer requires justification - but neither does reality deserve moral trust, worship, or praise. At that point, “God” becomes a poetic synonym for nature, not a being to whom moral predicates meaningfully apply.
In other words, the argument is not answered; it is bypassed by abandoning the very kind of God it addresses.
If “free will” is instead defined as acting in accordance with one’s nature or cognitive architecture, then choices are fully explained by prior causes, and alternative possibilities do not exist. That may preserve a colloquial sense of freedom, but it cannot absolve a creator from responsibility for the outcomes of the system they designed.
So yes, if free will is determined by nature, then classical free will does not exist - and with it goes the standard moral defense against the problem of evil.
The problem of evil operates at the level of coherence between claimed divine attributes and observed reality. Compassion and mercy guide how we treat those who suffer, but they don’t, by themselves, resolve that explanatory tension. If anything, the moral pull toward mercy highlights how inadequate many justificatory theodicies feel when confronted with lived experience.
Thanks for the thoughtful engagement - I appreciate the discussion as well.
That move does not resolve the problem of evil; it dissolves moral agency altogether. A necessary being cannot meaningfully be praised for goodness or blamed for harm, since no alternative was possible.
Whether there is one such being, many, or infinitely many is irrelevant to the ethical issue. The presence of involuntary suffering remains unchanged. What results is not classical theism, but a form of necessitarian or pantheistic metaphysics in which moral predicates no longer apply in the usual sense.
I suppose it is, but I did say I was approaching the question from a materialist, pantheistic point-of-view.
I do not believe in the existence of "evil" as its own entity. There is no force that we can say is the source of evil. "Evil" is a man-made construct. Now, we might say that we can use "evil" as an adjective rather than a noun - that human behavior might be termed "evil" if it harms others. But this is a result of a very strong instinct to survive combined with a brain that developed with the capacity to do evil acts.
As to the question of benevolence - again - of course humans may do benevolent things. But it is not because of some external force that has entered into them, something detached from who they are, but rather humans evolved to guard and maintain the group. We are first and foremost social creatures. This necessitates the evolution of things like empathy.
Quoting Truth Seeker
The only thing in existence that we know of that has these qualities is the human species. They are all products of our evolution.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Taking this from the pantheistic point-of-view - no, Nature is not morally accountable to us.
Quoting Truth Seeker
I disagree. I think an inherent sense of awe and wonder at all of creation leads us to not only treat it morally, but to also respect and revere it, while at the same time valuing reason and science.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Our morality is a product of our evolution.
Quoting Truth Seeker
Yes, I see, rather a new one was made.
You explicitly include a contradictory ability: the ability to create omnipotent beings. You can't have two omnipotent beings. One can always try to strip omnipotence from the other. Either that attempt fails, limiting the power of the first, or it succeeds, limiting the power of the second.
Further, you cannot have two omnipotent and omniscient beings. One can always predict the actions of the other. Either the prediction fails, limiting the omniscience of the first, or it succeeds, limiting the power of the second to act outside of the first's predictions.
So, the rest of your proof is redundant. Your premises are already contradictory.
Moreover, you are arguing with Christian secondary literature, not primary. The idea of God being philosophically perfect, possessing all the "omnis", only arose with the fusion of Christianity and Greek philosophy, really beginning with Augustine.
I think foreknowledge does not imply responsibility. For example, a meteorologist may know that it will rain tomorrow, and yet be in no way responsible for the rain.
So I think if you take the definition of free will at face and read it in a way that supporters of God's omni-attributes do, you will find that an omni-attribute God is not incoherent.
Aren't religious concepts of 'omnipotence' or 'omni-benevolence' just as impossible to comprehend as scientific concepts of 'eternity' and 'infinity'?
(Apologies if I make obvious mistakes here, I continue to call myself a 'lay' philosopher due to my lack of experience)
[i]You can’t simultaneously:
affirm omnibenevolence
deny that it prefers maximal flourishing[/i]
I am myself am a staunch atheist. But why does omnibenevolence require an end to suffering, or encouraging human happiness? I recently read Thich Nhat Hanh on grief and bereavement, and he states that love itself is impossible without suffering.
Perhaps this omni-benevolent God is suffering right along with us, as did his son in some conceptions, as we as a species struggle through life with a goal of nirvana for all of humanity? This would be a tremendous act of moral agency.
He/she/they may not be concerned about individual flourishing, but overall human flourishing? If his/her/their concept of 'maximal suffering' necessitates free will, does it not also necessitate suffering?
I am not trying to deny the problem of evil. I tend to view philosophical and religious wisdom as comparable, even compatible. I can't conclude that there is a God, nor can I conclude that there is not. To me, this does not entail relativism. I believe in the possibility of an 'objective' truth, I simply assume we will never fully grasp it. This should not stop us from striving for it, by acting both whole-heartedly and half-sure.
Personally, I prefer to believe in free will over divine omnipotence. A determined world with no suffering feels more like hell than heaven to me.
Quoting J
Modern analysis of trauma often assert that 'trauma is written on the body', or similar propositions. In this conception, 'forgetting' is not even possible?
Probably true. The "amnesia theodicy" would require that God eliminate even such unconscious bodily traumas.
Quoting Truth Seeker
God is maximally powerful, as innate power itself, which is constrained by metaphysical possibility. God cannot do whatever he wants: this is a straw man that new atheists tend to use to appeal to a magical kind of power that is the crux of their arguments against the coherence of God's supposed nature. As an obvious example, God cannot annihilate Himself out of existence and then, from nothing, create Himself back into existence: this is not something His nature allows Him to do despite Him really being all-powerful.
In terms of omnipotence, in classical theism 'omnipotence' does not refer to absolute power that is akin to a magical get-out-of-jail-free card that allows God to do whatever we can conceive of; instead, it is to have innate power. God is purely actual---pure act itself---which makes Him have power intrinsically (since 'power' classically is 'the ability to actualize potential').
God cannot create a being that is likewise omnipotent; and we can prove this two ways. First, omnipotence requires pure act; so a being of pure act, of pure actuality, is the only kind of being that can be omnipotent. Two purely actual beings have no potential to be actualized; and each has the ability to actualize any potential. Therefore, two or more purely actual beings could not exist since they would limit each other.
The second way is to note that a purely actual being must be purely simple because anything that has parts has the potential to be affected (by those parts); and two purely simple being cannot coexist because they would be ontologically indistinguishable from each other (thusly collapsing into each other).
Hey J! Long time no see, my friend.
Classical theism is a view going back to Aristotle which views God in a specific way. In this view, God is subsistent being itself; which is the same as pure act of thought; and that the same as pure act of will; and that pure goodness; and that pure actuality. In short, omnipotence, "all-powerfulness", and "maximally powerful" refer to the same thing in this view; that is, that a being has intrinsic power unrestrained by anything else. This is what it means for God to be purely actual: pure act lacks all potential (going back to Aristotle) and so it cannot be actualized in any manner by anything else. This pure act is pure power; since power classically is the ability to actualize potentials and pure act is purely able to actualize a potential (untainted by anything else).
My point in bringing it up was that a lot of sloppier arguments against God's existence hinge on thinking of omnipotence (as well as other attributes) as if it is some sort of absolute power that entails the ability to do anything we can conceive of. This is patently false and a straw man of theism; as is evident from the fact that I can conceive of God killing Himself and re-creating Himself as nothing itself to then re-become Himself as God, and yet this is clearly not metaphysically possible for God to do. God, as pure act, is properly eternal and changeless---which does entail that He cannot kill Himself.
Where I’d draw a careful distinction is between human attitudes toward reality and properties of reality itself. Awe, reverence, and moral concern are powerful and meaningful human responses but they do not entail that the universe is benevolent, morally trustworthy, or oriented toward flourishing. Evolution explains why we value empathy and cooperation; it does not imply that the structure of reality shares or supports those values.
So I agree that a new framework has emerged here. My point has simply been that this framework resolves the problem of evil by relinquishing omnibenevolent theism, not by reconciling it with suffering. And that, in itself, is a philosophically respectable conclusion.
The existence of multiple omniscient and omnipotent beings is not logically contradictory in itself; it becomes “impossible” only once additional theological assumptions (such as uniqueness or simplicity) are imposed. Those assumptions are not part of logic, but of a particular model of God.
So premise 2 is not invalidated by necessity alone. Rather, necessity is being used to redefine omnipotence in a restricted way - which concedes the broader point that classical omnipotence cannot be sustained without qualification.
An omniscient creator who intentionally actualizes a specific world - knowing in advance every choice that will occur within it, and having the power to actualize a different one - stands in a fundamentally different relation to outcomes than a passive observer. Coercion is not required for responsibility; origination is.
Likewise, appealing to “permission” does not remove moral responsibility when prevention was possible without contradiction. Permitting foreseeable, preventable harm while setting the conditions under which it occurs remains morally significant.
Finally, coherence depends on which notion of free will is in play. Compatibilist freedom may preserve divine foreknowledge and control, but it weakens ultimate moral responsibility. Libertarian freedom preserves responsibility, but conflicts with exhaustive foreknowledge and providential world-selection. My claim has been that the omni-attributes cannot all be retained simultaneously without qualification.
However, once omnipotence is defined this way, premise 2 is not so much refuted as replaced. The claim that God cannot create another omnipotent being follows from additional commitments - act-potency metaphysics, divine simplicity, and the identification of omnipotence with pure actuality - not from logic alone. Within that framework, uniqueness is guaranteed by definition.
The cost of this move, however, is that God no longer has alternative possibilities or deliberative choice in the ordinary sense. A purely actual, necessary being cannot do otherwise than it does. As a result, moral predicates such as responsibility, permission, or justification apply only analogically, not literally.
In that sense, classical theism preserves internal coherence by stepping outside the moral framework that gives rise to the problem of evil, rather than resolving it within that framework. That may be a defensible metaphysical position - but it is importantly different from a personal, morally accountable deity.
Where I’d want to draw a careful line is this: I don’t think omnibenevolence requires the elimination of all suffering, but I do think it cannot be indifferent to involuntary, non-consensual suffering that serves no necessary role in flourishing. Human love may require suffering because we are finite and constrained; an omnipotent being is not bound by that trade-off in the same way.
I also don’t deny that shared suffering or divine empathy would be morally meaningful - only that it removes responsibility if the suffering was knowingly and avoidably actualised. Compassion mitigates cruelty; it does not cancel authorship.
On forgotten suffering, my intuition is that suffering matters because it is experienced by a sentient being at the time it occurs, not because it is later remembered or redeemed. Modern trauma research, if anything, suggests that harm can persist even without conscious recall.
I share your sense that we may never fully grasp objective truth - but I think that very humility obliges us to take our deepest moral intuitions about harm seriously, rather than setting them aside when they become inconvenient.
I'm not following this. If an O-O being is a necessary being, then it is impossible for an O-O being to bring about "the existence of beings who are equally omniscient and omnipotent." (Premise 2).
Also, suppose God has a compelling reason (unknown to us, of course) for bringing about the existence of beings like us, who need salvation, instead of O-O beings.
Quoting Bob Ross
Quoting Bob Ross
OK. I thought you were drawing a distinction between the two terms, in terms of metaphysical possibility, but no matter. I now see you mean them both to refer to the characteristic of having innate or intrinsic power.
But how would a classical theist -- who I guess you're defining as pre-Christian? -- apply this concept of omnipotence to the usual set-up requiring a theodicy? When the questioner asks why God did not create a world without (or merely with less) suffering, this request doesn't seem to have anything to do with what is metaphysically possible, or what would be beyond "innate" power.
Quoting Bob Ross
I'm glad to be considered your friend :smile: but . . . have you mistaken me for another TPFer? I don't think we've conversed before. If I've forgotten, my apologies.
My point is not that a necessary O–O being could create equals. My point is that the impossibility of doing so does not follow from omnipotence alone - it follows only after you import additional constraints about the being’s nature (necessity, uniqueness, simplicity, etc.).
That distinction matters.
1. Omnipotence by itself does not block multiple O–O beings
If omnipotence is defined classically as the power to actualize all logically possible states of affairs, then:
* “There exists more than one omniscient, omnipotent being” is not a logical contradiction.
* Nothing about raw omnipotence or omniscience forbids plurality.
So, Premise 2 fails only if you add extra metaphysical assumptions. Logic alone doesn’t do the work.
2. Necessity is doing the real work - not omnipotence
When you say:
“If an O–O being is necessary, then it is impossible for it to bring about equals”
you’ve already restricted omnipotence by appealing to:
* necessary existence
* essential uniqueness
* fixed divine essence
Once you do that, omnipotence quietly becomes:
“the power to do whatever is logically possible given this very specific nature”
That is not classical omnipotence anymore. It’s qualified omnipotence.
And that was exactly my broader point: classical, unrestricted omnibenevolence, omniscience and omnipotence cannot be sustained without qualification.
You’re proving that point, not refuting it.
3. Appealing to “unknown reasons” doesn’t rescue the argument
Your final move:
“Suppose God has a compelling reason (unknown to us) for creating beings like us instead of O–O beings”
is a theological appeal, not a logical one.
It concedes that:
* The limitation is not logical impossibility.
* The limitation is grounded in divine preference, plan, or essence.
Which again confirms my claim: the restriction comes from theological commitments, not from logic itself.
* Logic alone does not rule out multiple O–O beings.
* The impossibility arises only after importing necessity, uniqueness, or essence.
* Once those are added, omnipotence is no longer “all logically possible states of affairs”.
* Therefore, classical omnipotence survives only by being redefined.
That’s the position. If we keep the terms clean, there’s no contradiction here - only a choice between unqualified omnipotence and theologically constrained omnipotence.
1. Immediate vs ultimate responsibility
Immediate cause of death: the people of the city who killed the son. They bear direct moral responsibility for the killing.
Proximate decision: the son chose to go, knowing the risk. He bears responsibility for undertaking a lethal mission.
Enabling authority: the father knowingly allowed an avoidable death while having the power to prevent it.
So responsibility is distributed, not exclusive.
2. Why this analogy fails as a defense of God
This story only works because the father is limited:
* He cannot save the people himself.
* He cannot stop the people of the city from killing his son without overriding everyone involved.
* He must choose between tragic options.
But an omniscient, omnipotent being is not in that position.
A God with unlimited power would have additional options that the father in your story does not:
* Save the people without requiring the son’s death.
* Prevent the killing without coercing moral agents.
* Achieve the goal without lethal means.
If such alternatives exist (and omnipotence implies they do), then permitting the son’s death is no longer a tragic necessity - it becomes a chosen means.
3. Foreknowledge + power + permission matters
If the father:
* Knows with certainty the son will die,
* Has the power to prevent it without sacrificing the goal,
* And still allows it,
then the father bears moral responsibility for allowing a preventable death, even if he didn’t kill his son directly.
This doesn’t mean the father is the only responsible party - but it absolutely rules out moral innocence.
4. The hidden assumption doing the work
The parable quietly assumes:
“There was no other way.”
That’s the very claim under dispute.
Once that assumption is removed, the analogy stops supporting omnibenevolence, omniscience and omnipotence and starts raising the same question it was meant to answer.
The people of the city are guilty of murder. The son knowingly chose self-sacrifice. The father bears responsibility if he knowingly allowed a preventable death while possessing the power to avoid it.
For a limited human father, that may be tragic. For an omniscient and omnipotent being, it is a moral problem - not a solution.
If the goal can be achieved without the death of the son, choosing his death cannot be justified by love alone.
Minimizing suffering does not necessarily maximize well-being. Without suffering (or potential suffering) there could be no adventure, no courage, no fortitude. Perhaps these virtues conduce well-being. Don't mountaineers choose suffering (because it is necessary to adventure and fortitude)? The Greeks believed that the Gods could not be heroic, because they were immortal. The reduction of their suffering necessarily led to the impossibility of certain virtues.
The theodicy I would use to attack "Creating vulnerable, ignorant, and powerless sentient beings when one could instead create equally omniscient and omnipotent beings knowingly introduces avoidable suffering." is the suffering is not avoidable. Th existence of beings like us is such a positive thing, it outweighs the suffering that necessarily results from our actions. God could create a realm of perfect beings where there would be no suffering, but that would not be a maximally good state of affairs.
Classical theism is pre-Christian but also heavily influenced Christianity: Thomas Aquinas is the most notable Aristotelians in the Catholic world.
I think how goodness and God are tied together in classical theism is quite beautiful (even if it is false); as it sees God as goodness itself from which all other things flow. In modern times, especially in protestantism, we see morality being used in a moral non-naturalist sense where goodness is a property thing’s have akin to monetary value instead of akin to roundness. Consequently, they are incapable of giving an account of how anything is really good because they must seek some external source to anything that attributes that supervenient property of goodness on to it (like a person attributes a value of $10 to a cup); and this leads them to have to special plead that God just makes up what is good as the Divine Arbiter.
In classical theism, on the other hand, goodness is the equality of a thing’s essence and esse; and so goodness is innate and natural to the thing in question (like having the property of hardness, roundness, etc.). This means that a thing is perfectly good when it is perfectly united in being and essence—in whatness and thatness. Absolute unity is, then, perfect goodness; and this absolute unity can only happen in subsistent Being itself. Why? Because anything which gets its being derivatively from something else—even its own parts—is has at least one aspect of its being which is not entail by its essence: namely, its being. This means that no contingent being can be perfectly good because it cannot be perfectly united in essence and existence (since its very existence is not a part of its essence). The only being which would have being intrinsically is Being itself; and so a perfectly good being would be Being itself, which is absolutely unified with itself and perfectly self-harmonious. This is also why the more being a thing has the better it is; because the more being it has the more its essence and existence are united (viz., the more realize it is at what it is)(e.g., a car without wheels isn’t as good as a car with wheels). Likewise, absolute unity requires absolute simplicity because if the being has parts then it does not have being intrinsically (for it depends on those parts to exist). This is what God is: He is the uniquely perfectly good being, which is the ipsum ens subsistens that is absolutely self-unified, self-harmonious, pure being, and purely simple.
This assumes that it would have been better for their to be less suffering at the cost of the natural world in which we live now; and I am not sure why that would be the case. Again, this assumes that God has a magical power to create a world which is better than the one we have because we have this intuition that suffering is bad and that we can conceive of a world without it; but this confuses metaphysical possibility with conceivability.
This isn’t true for classical theism simpliciter, but my flavor of it would say that a completely actualized and pure intellect would always have to pick the best option. This is because it has to have full knowledge of everything that is real and what could exist due to lacking nothing at what it is (which is an intellect); and the nature of an intellect is that it always wills what it perceives as best; and what this being, since it has perfect knowledge, perceives as best is what is best; and it has unrestrained power to will what it perceives as best (which would be what is best in this case). This means that the world which was created, in its entirety, must be the best out of the options that could have been out of necessity.
What is best is a creation perfectly ordered towards what is perfectly good; which is God Himself. So whatever may be contained in God’s creation must have been, at least prior to any Great Fall, perfectly ordered towards Himself (which is perfect unity, communion of persons, complementary natures, etc.).
No worries: maybe I am mistaking you for someone else.
This is a very good observation, and I just happened to explain this in detail to another gentlemen; so let me quote that here:
The point is that God necessarily freely chooses what is best; and this is unique to God because there is nothing the same as Him in His creation. The problem is that your view thinks He just necessarily chooses (without freedom); and this assumes a ‘freedom of indifference’ metaphysic of freedom (where freedom is fundamentally about being able to choose from options). Whereas, on the other hand, classical theism holds the ‘freedom for excellence’ view (which is that freedom is fundamentally about being in a state of being most conducive to flourishing at what kind of thing you are). In FFE, one can freely choose option, e.g., A when A was the only option they could choose from; and this is not possible in FOI. In FOI, God is uniquely the kind of being that is absolutely unfree because He has no option to choose otherwise like we do; whereas in FFE, God is uniquely the kind of being with absolute freedom because He can will in accord with reason with perfect knowledge uninhibited by anything external to Himself as pure act of thought (and this is what is most conducive of a state of being for an intellect to be an intellect).
But this isn’t true given your critique above. All your critique would show, at best, is that God has no freedom; but God, according to your concession of classical theism (for the sake of your point), would be perfectly good still and consequently would create in a perfectly good way.
But not to assume it is to assume something much harder to swallow -- that this is indeed the best of all possible worlds, so good that not even God could make it any better. You acknowledge this, on behalf of classical theism. How would one go on to argue which of the two assumptions is more likely? I don't know if there's a "likely-ometer" we can employ! But in favor of the first assumption, it's hard to disagree with the idea that a world without the suffering of my neighbor's child wouldn't be a better world; or, if that would upset some cosmic balance, then the next suffering child, or the next, or the next . . . etc. Surely just one could have been spared? There are so many to choose among! And while we're at it, maybe the Holocaust? And the Rwandan genocide? And . . .etc. Again, we're spoiled for choice. So much horror and suffering is all necessary?
Against the second assumption, we'd have to recalibrate all our moral and imaginative language in order to consider our current world "the best". It could only mean that God's idea of the best doesn't remotely resemble what a human would mean. And if that's the case, there's not much point in even talking about God using human attributes like goodness.
Quoting Bob Ross
No, that's too broad-brush. We have the intuition that a great deal of suffering is bad and that we can conceive of a world without at least some of it. If that intuition's incorrect, then see above: We are so in the dark about matters of good and bad, and of what is possible, that we might as well stop trying to talk about it.
There are, by the way, other defenses of the ways of God that don't back us into this corner, as you of course know.
Right. Would the world massively collapse in some way if PMS cramps were 10% less painful?
Not quite. I think you are thinking of ‘this world’ in the sense of our universe: I was referring to the totality of God’s creation, which includes heaven.
This is the central question one should be asking, and this is very astute of you to discern: most people get stuck in a problem of evil debate without examining this crucial aspect of the discussion. I would say that we have good, separate reasons to believe that God exists and in this classical sense; and so it must be the case that this is the best possible creation. However, someone could approach it from the perspective that this universe seems too insufferable or evil to be possibly what God could create; and this argument requires that they demonstrate why. When I say God exists in the classical sense, I must demonstrate why; just as much as they must demonstrate why this world is not a part of the best totality of creation. The problem is that they don’t demonstrate it: they leave it at this vague intuition they have.
Free will; natural laws; soul-building; etc.
But this, without justification, is a baseless and vague intuition you have. I get why you have it, but you need to demonstrate how God could have spared even just one child that has suffered pointlessly without comprising the higher goods of freedom, love, heaven, etc.
This is partially true, I think: for example, we tend to think suffering is intrinsically bad; but I don’t think this is true. Suffering is neutral: it depends on why you are suffering. This idea that suffering should be avoiding at the cost of almost everything is a liberal idea that I don’t share.
In order for this to be true, you would have to have sufficient knowledge of the totality of creation—including heaven and hell—so as to decipher how one could create a world that doesn’t sacrifice perfect justice, perfect mercy, freedom, love, etc. for the sake of avoiding suffering.
Can you demonstrate it?
True.
I'm not sure that helps. We can think of far too many cases -- the majority, probably -- in which suffering is bad for specific reasons. Let me really load the dice: The suffering and slow death of children who are trapped beneath a cliff after an earthquake is "bad," for reasons we can both give, though that word is much too weak. Preserving our ordinary meanings of goodness and badness, we could, perhaps, just about make a plausible case for why such suffering "had to happen" in this best of all possible worlds. The problem is that you have to multiply your plausible case by a million million, to equivalently explain all the other instances of "bad suffering." This is where the "likely-ometer" starts to go off, especially if you don't have a previous belief in a loving God.
The other alternative is, as you say, to just acknowledge that we don't have a clue. We lack the knowledge God has about outcomes, possibilities, etc. But, to be consistent, that would mean we could no longer speak about God as "good" or "loving", since we no longer know what those words mean from the cosmic viewpoint. They can't mean "sparing suffering whenever possible," unless our understanding of "possible" also is immeasurably out of whack. And if it is, we're back to wondering why it wasn't possible for God to do something that any child can do for its pet, namely create a "world" that is on the whole kind and nurturing.
This sense of what is loving and possible is not something most believers are willing to give up, and I don't think we should.
1. Being mindful ? being bound
A loving father should take his son’s wishes seriously. Respecting agency matters. But being mindful of someone’s wishes does not morally obligate you to permit their foreseeable death, especially when you have the authority and capacity to prevent it.
If that were the case, any parent could absolve themselves by saying, “My child wanted this.” That’s not how moral responsibility works.
2. Authority increases responsibility, not reduces it. The greater the power, the greater the culpability.
In your story, the father:
* Has authority over the son,
* Knows with certainty the son will die,
* Has the power to forbid the action and be obeyed.
Those facts increase the father’s moral responsibility. The more power and knowledge you have, the less plausible moral passivity becomes.
Mindfulness of wishes matters most when:
* The harm is unavoidable,
* The agent lacks decisive control,
* Or preventing the act would violate comparable moral rights.
None of that is true here.
3. Wishes don’t override preventable harm.
The son’s desire to save others is morally admirable. But admiration does not license allowing a preventable death when:
* The goal could be achieved by other means, or
* The authority figure could intervene without comparable moral cost.
Respecting autonomy has limits - especially when death is certain and avoidable.
4. Why this matters for the God analogy
For a human father in tragic circumstances, honoring a child’s wish may be morally defensible because options are constrained.
For an omniscient, omnipotent being, constraints evaporate. Appealing to “respect for wishes” becomes hollow when:
* No tragic trade-off is necessary,
* No lethal mission is required,
* No greater good depends on the death.
At that point, allowing the death is a choice, not a necessity.
Yes, the father should be mindful of his son’s wishes - but mindfulness does not justify permitting a foreseeable, preventable death when one has decisive power to stop it.
Respect for agency matters.
Preventing unnecessary death matters more.
1. “Minimizing suffering” ? “eliminating all difficulty”.
My premise does not claim that a perfectly omnibenevolent being must eliminate:
* effort,
* risk,
* challenge,
* self-chosen hardship.
It claims such a being would oppose unnecessary, non-consensual, and uncompensated suffering - especially when no greater good requires it.
Mountaineers choose hardship. That choice itself is part of their flourishing. But:
* the value lies in the agency, not the pain,
* and the pain is instrumentally tolerated, not intrinsically good.
A broken leg, frostbite, or death on the mountain are not what make the climb meaningful. They are tolerated risks - not virtues.
2. Virtues do not logically require suffering.
Courage, fortitude, and perseverance require:
* resistance,
* uncertainty,
* stakes.
They do not logically require agony, trauma, disease, or death.
An omniscient and omnipotent being could instantiate:
* meaningful challenge without horrific suffering,
* growth without child cancer,
* courage without genocide,
* fortitude without lifelong trauma.
The claim that suffering itself is necessary for virtue is an empirical assumption, not a logical truth - and a highly questionable one.
3. The “heroic gods” point concedes limitation.
When the Greeks said the gods could not be heroic because they were immortal, they were describing limited gods, not morally perfect ones.
But omnibenevolence, omniscience and omnipotence change the landscape:
* If a being cannot enable virtue without permitting extreme suffering, then it is not all-powerful.
* If it can, but chooses not to, then it is not omnibenevolent.
You can’t appeal to tragic necessity and omnipotence at the same time.
4. Preference matters, not absolute prohibition.
Premise 4 says:
“prefers the outcome that maximizes well-being and minimizes suffering.”
“Prefers” does not mean:
* zero pain,
* zero challenge,
* zero cost.
It means:
* no gratuitous suffering,
* no morally pointless horrors,
* no worse world chosen when a better one is available.
A being who chooses a world with extreme, involuntary suffering when a better one was possible has made a value judgment - and that judgment contradicts omnibenevolence.
* Chosen hardship can enhance well-being.
* Involuntary, excessive suffering does not become good by producing side virtues.
* Virtue does not logically require agony.
* Omnipotence eliminates tragic necessity.
So the appeal to adventure and fortitude does not undermine Premise 4 - it quietly assumes constraints that omnipotence explicitly denies.
1. “Suffering is not avoidable” is not established - it’s asserted.
Saying suffering is “not avoidable” only follows if all of the following are true:
* Free will logically requires ignorance, vulnerability, and massive asymmetries of power.
* Free will logically requires the capacity for extreme suffering.
* No alternative forms of agency are possible.
None of that has been demonstrated. It’s simply declared.
An omnipotent being is not restricted to one implementation of free will. If it is, omnipotence has already been abandoned.
2. Free will does not require this much suffering.
Even if we grant (for the sake of argument) that:
* Free will is intrinsically valuable, and
* Some risk must accompany it,
it does not follow that:
* children must die of cancer,
* people must be born with unbearable chronic pain,
* genocide, famine, and torture must exist,
* billions must live and die without understanding or opportunity.
That is a non sequitur.
A being who can design minds and worlds could:
* limit the magnitude of harm,
* ensure informed agency,
* prevent irreversible devastation,
* intervene before catastrophic suffering occurs.
If those options exist, then the suffering is avoidable.
3. “Outweighing suffering” is a moral trade-off - not omnibenevolence.
Claiming that:
“The existence of beings like us is so positive it outweighs the suffering”
is no longer a defense of perfect goodness. It’s a utilitarian calculus that accepts preventable harm for a greater aggregate outcome.
That position entails:
* some beings are created as means rather than ends,
* some lives are knowingly allowed to be net-negative,
* extreme suffering is morally acceptable if the total ledger comes out positive.
That is not omnibenevolence as normally understood. It is selective benevolence constrained by a preferred project.
4. “Maximally good” is doing illicit work here.
Saying a world of perfect beings would not be “maximally good” assumes:
* value depends on contrast with suffering,
* ignorance is necessary for meaning,
* vulnerability is intrinsically superior to flourishing.
Those are substantive axiological claims, not logical truths. They require argument, not intuition.
Worse, they imply that suffering is not merely permitted - it is instrumentally valuable.
At that point, suffering is no longer a tragic byproduct. It is part of the design.
5. The core dilemma remains untouched.
If God could have created:
* beings with greater knowledge,
* greater resilience,
* greater moral insight,
* reduced capacity for catastrophic harm,
and chose not to - then the suffering introduced was avoidable.
If God could not do this, then God is not omnipotent.
Your reply abandons omnibenevolence for outcome-based justification, assumes constraints omnipotence denies, and treats suffering as a necessary ingredient rather than a moral failure.
Once that concession is made, classical theism has already been revised - not defended.
1. You’ve conceded the central issue: moral categories no longer apply literally.
You explicitly state that for God:
* responsibility,
* permission,
* justification,
apply only analogically, not literally.
Once that concession is made, the problem of evil is not solved - it is declared inapplicable. That is not a resolution; it is an exemption.
But then classical theism loses the right to:
* praise God as morally good in the same sense we mean “good,”
* say God is just, loving, or omnibenevolent in any ordinary moral sense,
* appeal to God as a moral exemplar.
You cannot step outside morality to escape moral critique and then step back inside to make moral claims.
2. “Best possible world” collapses into triviality.
You argue that:
* God necessarily wills what He perceives as best,
* God’s perception just is what is best,
* therefore this world must be the best possible world.
But this renders “best” empty of independent content.
On this view:
whatever God actualizes = what is best
because God actualizes it.
That is not an evaluative claim - it’s a tautology.
It makes the statement:
“God created the best possible world”
equivalent to:
“God created the world God created.”
Nothing substantive follows from that, and no comparison with alternative worlds is meaningful.
Besides, you have not proven that God exists and created the universe we exist in.
3. Appealing to metaphysical necessity doesn’t neutralize the critique.
You suggest my argument assumes conceivability = metaphysical possibility.
It doesn’t.
My argument is conditional and structural:
If a world with less involuntary suffering and greater flourishing was metaphysically possible, and if God necessarily actualizes the best, then the existence of massive suffering requires explanation.
Your response avoids the conditional by asserting:
“This is the only world that could have been.”
But that assertion is doing all the work, and it is unsupported.
Worse, it entails that:
* childhood cancer,
* extreme congenital pain,
* moral ignorance leading to eternal consequences (on many theologies),
are not tragic features of reality but necessary components of the optimal order.
That is a very heavy metaphysical cost.
4. Freedom-for-Excellence does not rescue moral agency.
Reframing divine freedom as FFE rather than FOI doesn’t help here.
On your own account:
* God cannot do otherwise,
* God has no deliberative alternatives,
* God’s act is necessary and automatic given His nature.
Calling that “freedom” is a stipulative redefinition, not a vindication of agency.
If a being lacks alternative possibilities, cannot refrain, cannot revise, then it does not meaningfully choose in the sense required for moral praise or blame - regardless of how perfect its internal state is.
FFE may preserve metaphysical elegance, but it empties moral language of traction.
5. Saying “God remains perfectly good” becomes question-begging.
You conclude that: even if God has no freedom, He is still perfectly good.
But now “good” no longer means:
* responsive to suffering,
* opposed to harm,
* committed to minimizing needless pain.
It means: “whatever necessarily flows from divine actuality.”
At that point, “perfect goodness” is no longer a moral claim - it is a metaphysical label.
6. The real upshot (which you partly admit).
You say: classical theism preserves internal coherence by stepping outside the moral framework that gives rise to the problem of evil.
Exactly.
And that is my point.
Once you do that:
* the problem of evil is not answered but rendered irrelevant by fiat,
* omnibenevolence ceases to be recognisably benevolence,
* moral evaluation of God becomes impossible in principle.
Your position is internally coherent only because it gives up:
* literal moral goodness,
* meaningful responsibility,
* genuine evaluative comparison between possible worlds.
That is a defensible metaphysical move, but it is not a defense of omnibenevolence as ordinarily understood.
It doesn’t refute my critique.
It confirms that classical theism avoids it by exiting the moral domain entirely.
The fact that mountaineers choose suffering means that they (at least) see some virtue in overcoming it. Besides,, without suffering, courage would be meaningless., So would heroism. Have you read "The Worm Ouroboros" by E.R. Edison? It's a pre-Tolkien fantasy in which the heroes defeat the enemy, and then rue their peaceful lives without challenges and suffering, courage and heroism.
IN addition, who can know the mind of God? Maybe He values heroism more than you do? Maybe genocide offers the victims eternal bliss. OK, He massacred all those first born Egyptians, but we don't know what became of them after death.
It is true that "omnibenevolence" loses significance if everything God does is good by definition. IN that case, saying God is "benevolent" is like saying "God is God". But that's the theme of the Bible. God is good by definition. The careful reader must accept that (not in real life, but as a literary theme).
Does a deity exist in the real world?
Your response assumes that free will can be preserved while catastrophic consequences are engineered away. That assumption is unargued and highly questionable. A world in which harm is always capped, reversed, or divinely intercepted is one in which agency is never finally serious. Moral choice without the real possibility of irreversible failure is not the same kind of freedom. Omnipotence does not require God to actualize every imaginable form of agency, only those that are logically coherent.
You also assume God could indefinitely increase knowledge, power, and resilience without changing the moral structure of the world. But beyond a certain point, those increases collapse epistemic distance. A world that is too safe, too orderly, or too transparently managed would function as direct empirical proof of divine authorship and ongoing intervention. Belief would no longer be freely formed; it would be compelled by evidence. Faith would be replaced by inference, and trust by observation.
The claim, then, is not that suffering is good or instrumentally valuable. It is that certain goods—genuine trust, faith, moral responsibility, repentance, and transformation—logically require vulnerability and risk. Remove those conditions, and you remove the goods themselves. In that sense, the suffering is not “avoidable” without sacrificing the very features that give moral agency its depth.
So the dilemma does not stand. Either God could not eliminate suffering without destroying these goods (which places no limit on omnipotence), or God refrained in order to preserve free, non-coerced relationship (which places no limit on omnibenevolence). What remains is not a logical contradiction in classical theism, but a disagreement over which moral goods are worth having.
God didn't keep his words to Adam and Eve
In Genesis 2:16 and 17 the Bible (New International Version) says:
And the Lord God commanded the man, "You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die."
If after eating the forbidden fruits, Adam and Eve died just as God had said, then that would have been just and consistent with God's Words. However, after Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruits, instead of just Adam and Eve just dying:
1. God evicted them from Eden.
2. God punished Eve and all her daughters (an estimated 54 billion and counting) with painful childbirths.
3. God evicted all the other species from Eden, too, and makes herbivores, parasites, carnivores and omnivores instead of making all the species non-consumers.
4. God punished humans with having to toil to survive.
5. God commanded humans to reproduce which leads to more suffering and death. Ruling over other creatures causes suffering and death to those creatures, too. "God blessed them and said to them, "Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground."" - Genesis 1:28, The Bible (NIV)
These acts are cruel and unjust and totally inconsistent with what God had said to Adam and Eve which was they would just die if they ate the forbidden fruits. God didn't keep his words to Adam and Eve.
If God had made Adam, Eve, the angels, all the other species all-knowing and all-powerful, then they would all be making perfect choices. It is 100% God's fault that Adam and Eve ate from the Tree of Knowledge. If they were all-knowing and all-powerful, they would not have the desire to gain knowledge, as they would already have known everything there is to know.
I didn't ask to come into existence. No living thing does. I would have preferred it if I had never existed. If God is real and actually did the things the Bible claims, then these cruel, unjust and inconsistent actions make the Biblical God evil.
Global genocide - The Global Flood
Genesis 6:13, 7:21-23 (ESV)
“And God said to Noah, ‘I have determined to make an end of all flesh, for the earth is filled with violence through them. Behold, I will destroy them with the earth.’ … And all flesh died that moved on the earth, birds, livestock, beasts, all swarming creatures that swarm on the earth, and all mankind. Everything on the dry land in whose nostrils was the breath of life died.”
Summary: God kills virtually every living creature on Earth, sparing only Noah's family and the selected animals in Noah's Ark.
Genocide of Sodom and Gomorrah
Genesis 19:24-25 (ESV)
“Then the LORD rained on Sodom and Gomorrah sulfur and fire from the LORD out of heaven. And he overthrew those cities, and all the valley, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and what grew on the ground.”
Summary: Two entire cities are burned alive - men, women, and children - for collective sin.
The Ten Plagues of Egypt (mass suffering and death)
Exodus 12:29-30 (ESV)
“At midnight the LORD struck down all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of the captive who was in the dungeon, and all the firstborn of the livestock. And Pharaoh rose up in the night … and there was a great cry in Egypt, for there was not a house where someone was not dead.”
Summary: Every Egyptian firstborn - including infants, sentient animals and prisoners - is killed by God.
Genocides ordered in Canaan
Deuteronomy 20:16-17 (ESV)
“But in the cities of these peoples that the LORD your God is giving you for an inheritance, you shall save alive nothing that breathes, but you shall devote them to complete destruction, the Hittites and the Amorites, the Canaanites and the Perizzites, the Hivites and the Jebusites, as the LORD your God has commanded.”
Summary: Explicit divine command to exterminate entire populations.
1 Samuel 15:2-3 (ESV)
“Thus says the LORD of hosts, ‘I have noted what Amalek did to Israel … Now go and strike Amalek and devote to destruction all that they have. Do not spare them, but kill both man and woman, child and infant, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.’”
Summary: A total genocide command including infants and animals.
Slavery sanctioned and regulated, instead of banned
Leviticus 25:44-46 (ESV)
“As for your male and female slaves whom you may have: you may buy male and female slaves from among the nations that are around you. … You may bequeath them to your sons after you to inherit as a possession forever. You may make slaves of them, but over your brothers … you shall not rule one over another ruthlessly.”
Summary: Permanent enslavement of foreigners is explicitly permitted.
Human child sacrifice ordered (later revoked)
Genesis 22:2, 12 (ESV)
“He said, ‘Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering…’”
“He said, ‘Do not lay your hand on the boy…’”
Summary: God tests Abraham by commanding the killing of his child - a psychological act of cruelty, even if halted. Why would an all-knowing and all-powerful being need to test anyone? It makes no sense.
Mass slaughter of boys, men and non-virgin women and sexual slavery of virgin girls
Numbers 31:17-18 (ESV)
“Now therefore, kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman who has known man by lying with him. But all the young girls who have not known man by lying with him keep alive for yourselves.”
Summary: Command to kill boys and non-virgin women; keep virgin girls as sex slaves.
Sevenfold punishment and cannibalism (threat)
Leviticus 26:27-29 (ESV)
“But if in spite of this you will not listen to me, but walk contrary to me, then I will walk contrary to you in fury, and I myself will discipline you sevenfold for your sins. You shall eat the flesh of your sons, and you shall eat the flesh of your daughters.”
Summary: God threatens to make His people resort to cannibalism as punishment.
Eternal torment in Hell
Matthew 25:46 (ESV)
“And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.”
Revelation 14:10-11 (ESV)
“He also will drink the wine of God’s wrath … and he will be tormented with fire and sulfur in the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb. And the smoke of their torment goes up forever and ever, and they have no rest, day or night.”
Mark 9:43-48 (ESV)
“It is better for you to enter life crippled than with two hands to go to hell, to the unquenchable fire … where their worm does not die and the fire is not quenched.”
Summary: Eternal conscious torment for unbelievers - infinite punishment for finite crimes.
Matthew 25:41 (ESV)
“Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.’”
Revelation 20:10 (ESV)
“...and the devil who had deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur where the beast and the false prophet were, and they will be tormented day and night forever and ever.”
Luke 13:27-28 (ESV)
“But he will say, ‘I tell you, I do not know where you come from. Depart from me, all you workers of evil!’ In that place there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth, when you see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the prophets in the kingdom of God but you yourselves cast out.”
Matthew 13:49-50 (ESV)
“So it will be at the close of the age. The angels will come out and separate the evil from the righteous and throw them into the fiery furnace. In that place there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”
Divine deception and hardening of hearts
Exodus 9:12 (ESV)
“But the LORD hardened the heart of Pharaoh, and he did not listen to them, as the LORD had spoken to Moses.”
Summary: God prevents Pharaoh from repenting, then punishes him for it.
2 Thessalonians 2:11 (ESV)
“Therefore God sends them a strong delusion, so that they may believe what is false.”
Summary: God intentionally deceives some people.
Killing for minor offenses
Numbers 15:32-36 (ESV)
“While the people of Israel were in the wilderness, they found a man gathering sticks on the Sabbath day… And the LORD said to Moses, ‘The man shall be put to death; all the congregation shall stone him with stones outside the camp.’”
2 Kings 2:23-24 (ESV)
“He went up from there to Bethel, and while he was going up on the way, some small boys came out of the city and jeered at him, saying, “Go up, you baldhead! Go up, you baldhead!” And he turned around, and when he saw them, he cursed them in the name of the Lord. And two she-bears came out of the woods and tore forty-two of the boys.”
Summary: Death penalty for collecting firewood on the wrong day, and 42 small boys murdered by bears because they made fun of a prophet's baldness.
Collective punishment across generations
Exodus 20:5 (ESV)
“For I the LORD your God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and the fourth generation of those who hate me.”
Summary: Descendants are punished for ancestors’ actions - contrary to the Bible’s own later law: “The soul who sins shall die. The son shall not suffer for the iniquity of the father, nor the father suffer for the iniquity of the son. The righteousness of the righteous shall be upon himself, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon himself.” - Ezekiel 18:20 (ESV).
Predestination
Ephesians 1:4-5 (ESV)
“Even as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him. In love he predestined us for adoption to himself as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will,”
John 6:44 (ESV)
“No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him. And I will raise him up on the last day.”
Summary: God predestined who would be saved and who would be damned forever. It is absurd and utterly cruel and unjust.
Conclusion
These verses show that the Biblical God, by the Bible’s own words, kills entire populations, including children and animals, endorses slavery, inflicts suffering, threatens eternal torture in hell, hardens hearts or deceives minds, and predestinates who would be saved and who would be damned, removing moral responsibility.
When the acts attributed to God are judged by the same moral standards the Bible applies to humans - such as “You shall not kill,” “Love your neighbour,” and “Love your enemies” - they fit the description of moral evil far more often than benevolence. The Biblical God is a hypocrite who has killed and has failed to love his neighbours and enemies.
That’s why I conclude that, if the Biblical God exists and the Biblical text is true, His recorded actions are predominantly evil rather than good.
There are also extra-Biblical reasons. At least 99.9% of all the species that have existed so far on Earth are already extinct. Every year, non-vegans cause suffering and death to 80 billion sentient land organisms (e.g. cattle, chickens, pigs, lambs, goats, ducks, turkeys, etc.) and 1 to 3 trillion sentient aquatic organisms (e.g. fish, lobsters, octopuses, crabs, etc.). Life is full of suffering, injustice, and death. An allegedly all-knowing and all-powerful being, such as the Biblical God, could have prevented all suffering, injustice, and death, but failed to do so. He could have made all organisms made of energy that don't need to consume anything to live forever, but he didn't do that. So, all suffering, injustice, and death are 100% his fault. If he had not created anything, no one would have the burden of existence or the risk of making mistakes. If he had made everyone he has allegedly made, all-knowing and all-powerful, then everyone would always make perfect choices, and no one would have made any mistakes due to ignorance, incompetence or trickery.
I am an agnostic regarding the existence of God(s) because it is impossible to prove or disprove the existence of God(s). However, I am convinced that the Biblical God is imaginary and evil. He is imaginary because there is no evidence for the claims made in the Bible. He is evil because of his many evil words and actions in the Bible.
1. “Serious agency” does not require catastrophic irreversibility.
You assert that freedom is undermined if harm is capped, reversible, or intercepted.
That claim is not self-evident and is contradicted by ordinary moral practice.
We already limit irreversible harm (prisons, safety nets, emergency intervention) without erasing moral responsibility. A surgeon whose errors are correctable is still morally accountable. A child whose worst impulses are constrained is still a moral agent.
Irreversibility increases stakes; it does not define agency. Catastrophe is not a prerequisite for responsibility - it is an escalation.
2. Omnipotence is being constrained by a single model of agency.
You say omnipotence need not actualize “every imaginable form of agency.”
True, but the issue is narrower.
The question is whether any logically coherent form of agency exists that includes:
* meaningful choice,
* genuine responsibility,
* growth and transformation,
without permitting extreme, involuntary, lifelong or terminal suffering.
You have not shown that such forms are impossible - only that one familiar human model relies on high vulnerability. That is not a logical limit; it is a design preference.
3. Epistemic distance is a sliding scale, not a binary.
You claim that increasing knowledge, safety, or resilience would collapse epistemic distance and compel belief.
But epistemic distance is not all-or-nothing.
We already live in a world with:
* overwhelming evidence of physical law,
* strong evidence of other minds,
* strong evidence of moral consequences,
yet belief, trust, and commitment remain non-coerced.
A world with:
* less ignorance,
* less needless harm,
* fewer grotesque asymmetries of power,
does not logically become a world of forced belief. That is a slippery-slope assertion, not a demonstrated necessity.
4. Faith and trust do not logically require horrific suffering.
You list goods such as:
* faith,
* trust,
* repentance,
* transformation,
and claim they require vulnerability and risk.
Grant vulnerability and risk.
But nothing in that list requires:
* childhood cancer,
* congenital agony,
* genocidal violence,
* lives that are net-negative from birth to death.
If those are required, that is not a logical truth - it is a morally loaded stipulation.
5. The dilemma still stands - but now it is clearer.
You say:
Either God could not eliminate suffering without destroying these goods, or God refrained to preserve free relationship.
But the dilemma I raised was never about eliminating all suffering. It was about avoidable, excessive, non-consensual suffering.
So the real options remain:
1. God could have preserved agency while reducing such suffering but did not
? omnibenevolence is compromised.
2. God could not do so
? omnipotence is constrained by a very specific anthropology.
3. God necessarily created this world
? moral predicates no longer apply literally.
Your reply commits to (2) while denying it is a limitation. But any claim of “logical necessity” must be argued - not asserted.
6. “Disagreement over values” is not enough.
This is not merely a dispute over which goods are “worth having.”
It is a dispute over whether:
* extreme suffering is a necessary condition for moral depth,
* or whether that claim reflects inherited intuitions rather than logical constraint.
Until necessity is shown, “worth it” remains a moral preference - not a refutation.
You’ve presented a coherent theodicy, but coherence is not the same as vindication.
Your defense succeeds only by:
* asserting that certain horrors are logically indispensable,
* narrowing omnipotence to one model of agency,
* and treating alternative designs as incoherent without proof.
That doesn’t dissolve the problem.
It relocates it into an unargued claim about what must be true rather than what is merely familiar.
So you think the father should have forbade his son from going if I have understood you correctly. You think the responsibility to prevent harm has greater weight and therefore commanding the son not to go would be the right thing to do.
For the sake of transparency, I will say now that I disagree. I think the father's greater responsibility is to observe what his adult son wishes as long as that wish is a legitimate wish in the father's eyes; that is, the father agrees that the goal (mission) achieved is not a bad or undesirable goal.
Do you think all parents should command their children not to join the military, because the military entails foreseeable danger and therefore entails the potential for a harm that could have been prevented?
That would seem to follow from what you said earlier.
One principle of literary criticism is that it is unfair to criticize a book for failing to be a different book. The critic should criticize a book for what it is, not what it isn't.
The Bible affirms the beneficence of God repeatedly. The reader (critic) is thus required to attempt to overcome the seeming paradox resulting from God's goodness and the seemingly wicked acts Truthseeker lists.
It's not easy, but thousands of years of religious apologetics (with which I am not an expert) might help.
Regarding the "genocides": isn't it acceptable for the child who builds the sandcastle to kick it over? It might be evil for the local bully to destroy the other kid's creation -- but not for the maker.
In addition, God created a world in which death exists. To an immortal outside of time and space the distinction between dying in a flood and dying of old age might be irrelevant.
As God asked Job, He might ask Truthseeker," 4Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding. 5Who hath laid the measures thereof, if thou knowest? or who hath stretched the line upon it? 6Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? or who laid the corner stone thereof; 7When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?"
The moral rules that apply to man clearly do not apply to God -- the finite does not apply to the infinite. Death is doled out by God in many ways -- but humans are enjoined from doling it out to their fellows.
Judging the benevolence of God by human standards is a mistake.
Regarding Adam and Eve's expulsion from Eden, I happen to be reading Paradise Lost right now. Here is the magnificent ending of that epic, as Adam and Eve are expelled from Eden.
"They, looking back, all the eastern side beheld
Of Paradise, so late their happy seat,
Waved over by that flaming brand; the gate
With dreadful faces thronged, and fiery arms:
Some natural tears they dropt, but wiped them soon;
The world was all before them, where to choose
Their place of rest, and Providence their guide:
They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow,
Through Eden took their solitary way."
Was Paradise lost, or gained? "The world was all before them" and they were free. Freedom entails difficulties, but overcoming them is a pleasure (and a virtue) beyond that of simple existence without suffering.
(By the way, in "Paradise Lost" Satan is a dynamo, rebelling against an autocratic heaven. God and Jesus are more mamby-pamby. Is autocracy consistent with a utopian heaven? i'd suggest utopia must be an anarchy. Satan's rebellion lacked nobility because he would rather "rule in Hell than serve
in heaven." Other revolutionaries have followed suit. The autocracies of the Tsar or the Shah were destroyed, but autocracy merely shifted leadership.)
Also, I'm not religious. But it seems to me that judging God by human standards is a mistake. I'll grant that this makes asserting God's omnibenevolence circular.
On the “serious agency” point: I’m not claiming catastrophe defines moral responsibility. I’m saying that a world where consequences are always capped, reversed, or preemptively blocked is not just a safer version of ours, it’s a fundamentally different kind of moral environment. Things like prisons, safety nets, and error correction only make sense against a background where irreversible harm is possible. They mitigate risk; they don’t erase moral finality. If final devastation is structurally impossible, agency loses depth in a way ordinary safeguards don’t touch.
You keep appealing to alternative “designs” of agency, but none are actually described in a way that preserves everything at once: meaningful choice, deep responsibility, transformation, and real stakes, without allowing catastrophic misuse. Pointing out that the human model involves vulnerability doesn’t show that vulnerability is optional. It might be doing essential work. Until a clear alternative is on the table, appealing to omnipotence just becomes hand-waving.
On epistemic distance: this isn’t about certainty versus uncertainty in general. It’s about whether the world clearly advertises a supervisory intelligence that steps in whenever things get too bad. A reality that reliably prevents extreme suffering, corrects outcomes in real time, and neutralizes catastrophic harm wouldn’t just be “nicer” or “more informed.” It would obviously be managed. At that point, belief wouldn’t be freely formed, it would be the default inference. Trust would turn into compliance. That’s not a slippery slope; it’s a predictable consequence of systematic intervention.
And I agree that faith and trust don’t require specific horrors like cancer or genocide. But the claim was never that each instance is necessary. The claim is that a world with genuine freedom must allow the possibility of horrors, and once that’s allowed, their actual occurrence follows from creaturely action and natural processes, not divine micromanagement. Treating suffering as if it were individually selected misses the level at which the theodicy is operating.
So I don’t think the dilemma comes back unchanged. The real disagreement is whether moral depth, free trust, and non-coerced relationship can exist in a world that’s systematically engineered to prevent extreme loss. You think yes. The theist thinks no, because agency, epistemic distance, and moral finality hang together. That’s a real disagreement about values and metaphysics, not a proof that classical theism is incoherent.
1. You’ve changed a key condition.
In your original story, the father:
* knows with certainty that the son will die,
* knows he can prevent it, and
* knows the son will obey if forbidden.
That is radically different from a parent whose adult child joins the military.
In real life:
* Parents do not have certainty of death if their adult son joins the military.
* Parents do not have the authority to prevent adult children from joining the military.
* Parents do not have the power to prevent the harm even if they disapprove.
So the military case lacks the decisive features that generated responsibility in your original scenario.
2. Moral responsibility tracks power and knowledge.
My claim was never:
“Parents must prevent all foreseeable risks.”
It was:
When an agent has decisive power, foreknowledge, and a non-tragic alternative, responsibility attaches.
A parent whose adult child joins the military:
* lacks decisive control,
* lacks certainty,
* lacks alternative means to achieve the same goal.
The father in your story has all three.
3. Respecting wishes has limits - even legitimate ones.
You say the father’s greater responsibility is to respect the son’s legitimate wish.
But legitimacy of the goal does not automatically justify permitting certain death when:
* the harm is guaranteed,
* prevention is possible,
* and the authority to prevent exists.
If respecting wishes always overrides harm prevention, then:
* parents could not intervene in suicidal missions,
* guardians could not stop terminally dangerous choices,
* authority would be morally hollow.
That’s an implausible moral standard.
4. The analogy only works by smuggling in human limitation.
Your intuition relies on treating the father as:
* emotionally involved but power-limited,
* morally serious but tragically constrained.
Once those limits are removed - once the father has certainty, authority, and alternatives - the moral calculus changes.
That is exactly why the analogy breaks when it’s used to model God.
5. Why this matters for the original debate.
The point was never “parents should forbid risk.”
The point was:
Allowing a preventable, foreknown death while possessing decisive power is not morally neutral.
In human cases, that power rarely exists.
In divine cases, it is central.
No, it does not follow that parents should forbid military service.
Yes, it does follow that an authority who knows death is certain and preventable bears responsibility if they permit it.
The analogy only survives by quietly stripping the father of the very powers that made the case morally interesting in the first place.
Your disagreement is understandable, but it depends on sliding from a case of decisive control to one of tragic limitation. That slide does the work, not the principle.
1. Literary criticism does not suspend moral evaluation.
The principle you cite - criticize a book for what it is, not what it isn’t - does not exempt a text from moral scrutiny.
If a book asserts that a character is perfectly good while depicting that character commanding genocide, killing babies, endorsing slavery, and punishing innocents, then pointing out the evil choices is not asking the book to be a different book. It is taking the book at its word.
If anything, refusing to evaluate the claims internally would be special pleading.
2. Repetition of beneficence is not evidence of beneficence.
The Bible asserts God’s goodness repeatedly. So do many texts about many rulers.
Assertions do not settle moral questions. Actions do.
If a text says “X is perfectly good” and then describes X doing things that would be considered monstrous if done by anyone else, the burden is not on the reader to harmonize at all costs. It is on the claim itself.
Appealing to “thousands of years of apologetics” is not an argument - it’s an appeal to tradition.
3. The sandcastle analogy fails categorically.
Comparing sentient beings to sandcastles collapses the moral distinction that makes morality possible at all.
* Sandcastles do not feel terror.
* Sandcastles do not experience pain.
* Sandcastles do not value their own continued existence.
If the creator–creature relationship nullifies moral obligations, then no action toward creatures can be morally evaluated - including mercy, love, or justice.
At that point, “omnibenevolence” becomes meaningless.
4. “Death is irrelevant to an immortal” is morally fatal.
You suggest that from God’s perspective, dying in a flood or of old age may be irrelevant.
That move concedes the core objection.
What matters morally is not how death looks to the immortal agent, but how it is experienced by the mortal sentient beings.
If a being’s indifference to suffering is justified by its transcendence, then that being is not omnibenevolent.
5. The Book of Job is an argument from power, not goodness.
“Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth?” does not justify anything morally. It asserts authority, not righteousness.
Power can silence a question.
It cannot answer it.
If the response to moral critique is “you are too small to judge,” then moral language has been abandoned - not defended.
6. Two incompatible claims are being made.
You say: The moral rules that apply to man clearly do not apply to God.
But then the Bible also claims:
* God is good,
* God is just,
* God is loving,
* God is a moral lawgiver.
Those claims only make sense if moral terms apply non-trivially.
If God is beyond morality, then:
* “God is good” is not praise,
* “God is just” is not meaningful,
* “God is benevolent” is empty.
You can’t exempt God from moral standards and still credit him with moral virtues.
7. Paradise Lost doesn’t rescue the theology.
Milton’s poetry is powerful - but poetry is not the same as moral justification.
Freedom can involve difficulty.
That does not entail:
* inherited guilt,
* cosmic punishment,
* or divine retribution.
Nor does it retroactively justify suffering imposed without consent.
8. You’ve correctly identified the cost.
You end by saying: I’ll grant that this makes asserting God’s omnibenevolence circular.
That is exactly right.
Once we say:
* God is good because God is God,
* whatever God does is good because God does it,
* and human moral reasoning is inapplicable,
then “omnibenevolence” no longer means benevolence. It becomes a stipulative label, not a moral claim.
I am not demanding that the Bible be a different book.
I am taking its claims seriously and following them where they lead.
And where they lead is this:
Either God is morally evaluable - in which case the depicted actions seriously challenge omnibenevolence, or God is beyond morality - in which case calling him omnibenevolent is empty.
You can have transcendence.
You can have immunity from critique.
But you cannot have those and meaningful moral goodness at the same time.
1. The burden of necessity really does matter.
You say I’m setting the bar for “necessity” too high. But that’s exactly the bar omnipotence sets.
If the claim is: Extreme suffering is unavoidable if morally serious agency exists, then that is a modal claim - a claim about what is and is not logically possible. Modal claims carry a burden. They are not discharged by saying “no alternative has been spelled out.”
I am not required to prove every alternative design.
You are required to show that none are possible.
Absent that, “God could not have done better” remains an assertion, not a conclusion.
2. You quietly redefine “real stakes” as “irreversible devastation”.
This is the hinge of your argument.
You claim that unless final devastation is structurally possible, agency “loses depth.”
But that is a stipulative elevation of catastrophe, not a logical truth.
* Stakes require significance, not annihilation.
* Finality requires consequence, not maximal harm.
* Responsibility requires authorship, not the power to ruin lives irreversibly.
We already recognize this distinction everywhere else:
* A judge’s ruling has real stakes even though executions are barred.
* A pilot’s error is morally serious even if fail-safes exist.
* A parent’s betrayal can permanently damage trust even without bodily harm.
Depth does not scale linearly with horror.
3. Safeguards ? micromanagement.
You repeatedly slide from “engineered limits” to “constant divine supervision.”
That slide is doing illicit work.
A world could be structured such that:
* catastrophic harm is physically impossible beyond a threshold,
* irreversible devastation is blocked by lawlike constraints,
* agents still act freely within those bounds,
without any visible intervention at all.
Gravity already works this way. So do conservation laws. So do biological limits.
If you reply that those limits would themselves advertise design - then epistemic distance is already gone, because fine-tuning arguments exist in our world.
So either:
* epistemic distance is already compromised (which theists deny), or
* lawlike constraints do not force belief.
You can’t have it both ways.
4. “Possibility of horrors” vs “necessity of horrors”.
You now concede something crucial:
“The claim was never that each instance is necessary.”
Good. That matters.
Because once you admit that:
* specific horrors are not required,
* their distribution is not chosen,
* their victims are not selected for moral reasons,
then the question sharpens, it does not dissolve:
Why allow this magnitude, this distribution, this asymmetry, this lifelong devastation?
A world can allow moral risk without allowing:
* infants to be murdered,
* people to be born into nonstop agony,
* moral understanding to be radically unequal.
Allowing the possibility of misuse does not entail allowing every degree of misuse.
5. “No alternative has been described” is not decisive.
You say no alternative preserves everything at once.
But “everything at once” here includes:
* your specific conception of moral depth,
* your specific anthropology,
* your specific epistemology,
* your specific theology of faith.
That stack is not neutral. It is already a theological package.
Omnipotence is precisely the claim that reality need not be restricted to the one package we happen to find familiar.
If only one fragile configuration of agency is possible, omnipotence has already been curtailed.
6. This is not just a values disagreement.
You conclude that this is merely a disagreement over values and metaphysics.
Not quite.
It is a disagreement over whether:
* claims of logical necessity have been justified,
* omnipotence is doing any real work,
* omnibenevolence is more than a project-relative preference.
If your defense requires:
* asserting that catastrophe is essential,
* asserting that no other agency is possible,
* asserting that moral depth scales with irreversible harm,
then, the position is coherent - but it is no longer compelled by the classical attributes of God. It is one metaphysical vision among others.
Your theodicy does not collapse into incoherence, but it survives by raising suffering to a structural necessity and lowering omnipotence to a single viable design space.
That is a substantive metaphysical commitment, not a logical inevitability.
Until the necessity is shown rather than assumed, the original challenge stands:
If a world with less extreme, non-consensual suffering was metaphysically possible, then allowing this one was a choice - and that choice bears on omnibenevolence.
The disagreement is real.
But it is not cost-free, and it is not neutral.
Also, we have not established that biological organisms have libertarian free will. It is assumed by religious people that humans have immortal souls which grant them free will, but the existence of souls and free will is not proven with evidence.
It might not have been your intention to make the claim, yet I think it is an implication of your position. If greater responsibility attaches to preventing harm, as you have asserted, then it follows that any preventable harm must be prevented or else the agent is responsible. In other words, if there is even a potential for harm that turns out to become actualized, the supervising parent must be responsible for not having prevented it. According to your argument, it would not even be morally acceptable for a parent to let their child leave the house, because the child might get a bruised elbow.
Quoting Truth Seeker
*It does not matter if death is certain, the possibility of death that the parent knows about should render them responsible on your account.
*Assume at least one parent in the world does have that authority and if they say "no military" then their child will obey them; it is not an inconceivable situation. You can deny that this is possible, but that would seem ad hoc, to me at least.
*By ordering the child not to join, they would thereby prevent any harm that would have occurred. The parent does have power in the relevant sense.
[b]My claim was never:
“Parents must prevent all foreseeable risks.”
It was:
When an agent has decisive power, foreknowledge, and a non-tragic alternative, responsibility attaches.[/b]
Those are not equivalent claims, and collapsing them into one is doing the argumentative work for you.
1. Why your reductio does not follow
You argue that if responsibility attaches whenever harm is preventable, then parents could never let children leave the house.
But that reductio only follows if my principle were:
“Any preventable harm must be prevented.”
It isn’t.
My principle is conjunctive, not absolute. Responsibility attaches only when all three conditions are met:
Decisive power – the authority to reliably prevent the outcome.
Foreknowledge – not mere possibility, but knowledge that the harm will occur.
A non-tragic alternative – the good can be achieved without the harm.
Letting a child leave the house satisfies none of these:
There is no decisive control over outcomes.
There is no foreknowledge that harm will occur.
Normal life itself requires risk; forbidding it would itself be a tragic alternative.
So the bruised-elbow reductio simply does not apply.
2. Possibility ? certainty (and this distinction matters morally).
You say:
“It does not matter if death is certain; the possibility of death should render the parent responsible.”
This is where your argument overreaches.
Moral responsibility does not track mere possibility. If it did:
every driver would be morally responsible for every accident they did not cause,
every parent would be culpable for every illness their child contracts,
every act of permission would become negligence.
Moral systems universally distinguish:
risk from foreknown outcome,
exposure from guarantee,
tragic uncertainty from certain harm.
Erase that distinction, and moral responsibility becomes incoherent.
3. Authority alone is not sufficient.
You then say: assume a parent has authority such that the child will obey.
Even granting that (for the sake of argument), authority by itself does not generate responsibility unless the other conditions are present.
If:
the parent does not know harm will occur,
the good pursued is not achievable otherwise,
or forbidding the action would itself impose serious harm,
then responsibility does not attach in the way you claim.
Your move treats power as automatically obligating, which no plausible moral theory accepts.
4. Why the original case still stands
In your original parable, the father:
knows with certainty the son will die,
knows he can prevent it,
and knows the mission’s goal could be achieved without that death (or at least has not been shown otherwise).
That is why responsibility attaches there - and why the analogy was relevant to God.
The military case works only by removing those features and then insisting the same moral judgment applies anyway.
It doesn’t.
5. The deeper issue you’re sliding past.
Your objection keeps trying to force a false dilemma:
either prevent all risk,
or bear responsibility for all harm.
But moral responsibility does not work that way.
It scales with:
knowledge,
control,
alternatives,
and proportionality.
That scaling is exactly what makes human moral reasoning possible - and exactly what breaks when applied to an omniscient and omnipotent being who supposedly has all knowledge, all power, all control, and all alternatives.
You misquoted my position, and the reductio depends on that misquotation.
Mere possibility of harm does not generate responsibility.
Decisive power + foreknowledge + non-tragic alternatives do.
The military analogy fails because it lacks those conditions.
The original point remains intact.
The disagreement isn’t about whether parents should prevent all risk.
It’s about whether allowing foreknown, preventable catastrophe while possessing decisive power is morally neutral.
That question does not dissolve by expanding “responsibility” until it becomes absurd.
You are no longer addressing the issues I raised in my first post in this thread. You have digressed in a direction that doesn't add anything to that discussion.
This is not so; you have misunderstood my argument. I stipulated that a parent can give permission to goals that the parent themselves find to be good goals. So, a parent can intervene if a goal is not good according to them; a parent who believes suicide is wrong would not give a child that permission. Guardians can stop dangerous choices. Authority would not be hollow.
You added an extra condition to the story I told; namely, you demanded that there must be another way. You made this demand because it coheres with your understanding of God's omnipotence, an understanding that no classical theists would agree to; Bob Ross outlined what I find to be a quite good explanation of God's omnipotence in a classical understanding.
1. You’ve shifted the criterion, not removed the problem.
You now say:
A parent may permit only goals the parent judges to be good.
That move changes the principle from respecting the child’s wishes to the parent’s moral judgment. Once you do that, the question is no longer about autonomy - it’s about responsibility for authorising a lethal means.
If the parent judges the goal good and knows the means will certainly kill the child and can prevent that death, then the parent becomes morally implicated in allowing the death.
Calling the goal “good” does not neutralise responsibility for the foreseeable, preventable harm used to achieve it.
2. Good goals do not license certain death when prevention is available.
Many goals are good:
saving lives,
defending victims of atrocities,
preventing injustice.
That does not mean:
any means are acceptable,
or that permitting certain death is morally neutral when one has the power to prevent it.
If lethal permission is always justified by the goodness of the goal, then the principle becomes:
“A good end licenses foreseeable, preventable death.”
That principle is doing all the work - and it is far from obvious.
3. The suicide analogy still matters.
You say suicide can be blocked because the goal is bad.
But consider this:
If a person sincerely believes their death will save others,
and the authority figure agrees the end is good,
and death is certain and preventable,
your framework provides no reason to intervene.
So the suicide case reappears under a different description. The moral work is not being done by “goal legitimacy” alone.
4. Authority does not dissolve responsibility - it concentrates it.
You are right that authority need not be hollow. But authority plus permission is exactly what generates responsibility.
The moment the parent says:
“I judge this end good, and I permit you to pursue it, knowing it will kill you,”
the parent is no longer a bystander. They are a moral authoriser.
That’s the point you haven’t displaced.
5. Why this still matters for the God analogy.
This clarification actually strengthens the original critique.
If:
God judges the end good,
knows suffering or death will certainly occur,
and could prevent it without losing the end,
then permitting it is not morally neutral - it is a chosen means.
Appealing to “good goals” does not erase that responsibility; it relocates it.
You’ve shown that authority isn’t hollow. Agreed.
But you haven’t shown that permitting certain, preventable death in service of a good goal is morally innocent.
That is the crux.
Once permission is given knowingly and preventably, responsibility does not disappear - it deepens.
If my replies have come across as accusatory, that wasn’t my intention. I’m pressing hard on the logic, not on you. Philosophical disagreement often sounds sharp because it forces distinctions that feel uncomfortable. That’s what’s happening here.
Now to the substance.
1. Adding “another way” is not ad hoc - it is structurally required.
I did not add an extra condition arbitrarily. I made explicit a condition that was already implicit in what the analogy is being used to do.
Your analogy is not a free-standing moral vignette. It is doing theological work. It is meant to illuminate or defend a claim about divine permission, responsibility, and goodness.
Once the analogy is being used to model God, omnipotence becomes relevant by definition.
So the question “was there another way?” is not an ad hoc escape hatch - it is the central discriminator between:
* tragic necessity, and
* chosen permission.
If there is no other way, permission may be tragic but justified.
If there is another way, permission becomes morally loaded.
That distinction is not something I introduced to save my position. It is what gives the analogy moral traction in the first place.
2. If classical theism denies “another way,” then that is the real disagreement.
You say: you demanded that there must be another way because it coheres with your understanding of God’s omnipotence, an understanding no classical theists would agree to.
Then the disagreement is not about ad hoc reasoning. It is about this:
I take an omniscient and omnipotent God to be actually omniscient and omnipotent. Classical theism (as you’re presenting it) collapses that to one necessary outcome.
Once that move is made, the analogy changes character entirely.
The father is no longer a deliberating moral agent who is truly omniscient and omnipotent.
He is a necessary conduit through which one fixed outcome flows.
At that point, we are no longer discussing permission in a morally recognisable sense.
3. But notice the cost of the classical move.
Bob Ross’s account is coherent - I’ve already said that.
But it comes at a price:
* God does not meaningfully choose between alternatives.
* God cannot do otherwise.
* Moral predicates apply only analogically.
* “Good” no longer contrasts with “better” or “worse.”
That means the analogy to a human father no longer works, because the father in your story:
* deliberates,
* weighs reasons,
* could have acted otherwise.
If the divine case lacks those features, then the analogy fails on your side, not mine.
4. Why pressing this point is not evasion.
You’re right that classical theism rejects my understanding of omniscience and omnipotence.
But that doesn’t make my objection ad hoc. It makes it conditional:
If God has the power classical theism claims, and if moral language applies in any substantive sense, then permission of foreknown, preventable catastrophe is morally significant.
Classical theism responds by denying one of those “ifs.”
That’s a legitimate move - but it’s a revision, not a refutation.
5. So where we actually stand.
This is not about me dodging your analogy.
It’s about this fork:
* Either the analogy is genuinely moral (choice, permission, responsibility apply),
* Or it is metaphysical (necessity, pure act, no alternatives).
It cannot be both at once.
When I press on “another way,” I’m forcing that fork into the open - not inventing it to escape the argument.
I’m not dismissing your analogy. I’m taking it seriously enough to ask what must be true for it to work.
If classical theism says “there was no other way,” then the analogy stops defending omniscience and omnipotence and starts exempting God from moral evaluation.
That may preserve internal coherence - but it does so by stepping outside the moral framework the analogy was meant to support.
That’s the real disagreement here, and it isn’t ad hoc at all.
Leibniz’s move is internally required if one insists on omniscience + omnipotence + omnibenevolence + necessity. But, as you say, it’s prima facie absurd once you stop treating it as a scholastic exercise and start looking at the world we actually inhabit.
Your examples get right to the heart of it:
Would faith collapse if toothaches were 10% less painful?
Would moral seriousness evaporate if backs and knees were better engineered?
Would trust be negated if childhood leukemia didn’t exist?
These aren’t rhetorical flourishes - they expose how implausible the “razor’s edge” claim really is. The idea that this exact calibration of suffering is necessary for maximal goodness strains credulity far more than the claim that a better world was possible.
And that’s the key point I’ve been pressing all along:
The problem isn’t that theism is incoherent. The problem is that saving omnibenevolence requires saying things that are increasingly unbelievable about suffering being indispensable at this scale, in this distribution, with this intensity.
Once we admit, even intuitively, that:
* small reductions in suffering wouldn’t undermine agency,
* modest biological improvements wouldn’t negate faith,
* fewer horrors wouldn’t flatten moral depth,
then, the necessity claim collapses. And with it, the strongest classical theodicy.
So yes, good discussion indeed. And for what it’s worth, using tools to sharpen arguments doesn’t bother me in the slightest. What matters is where the reasoning lands, not how polished the prose is.
If nothing else, I think we’ve shown this much clearly: “Best of all possible worlds” is not a conclusion forced on us by reason - it’s a cost classical theism chooses to pay. I feel that this is a terrible world, which is full of suffering, injustice, and death on an unbearable scale. Such a world is not compatible with the existence of any omnibenevolent, omniscient and omnipotent God, because such a God would have prevented such a world from ever existing. This world is entirely compatible with the existence of an evil God.
@Jamal@Michael
In "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell" William Blake asserts that heaven and hell are flip sides of the same coin. Heaven is Apollonian; hell Dionysian. Perhaps "good" is not possible without evil Creating a world in which there is evil (or in which there is potentially evil) may be (from God's perspective) the only way to create a world in which the good can be valued. If everything was good, the word "good" would lose all meaning -- it would just be whatever is.
Also, we don't know how death feels to sentient beings. They are all dead, and can't tell us.
Whining that God failed to create a perfect world -- from your perspective -- ignores how wonderful the creation is.
"3When I behold Your heavens,
the work of Your fingers,
the moon and the stars,
which You have set in place—
what is man that You are mindful of him,
or the son of man that You care for him?"
Is it really fair to say that the moon and the stars are not good enough to suit your fancy? "Man was born to trouble, as the sparks fly upwards." Oh, well. Life is wonderful anyhow.
Funny - I recently discussed this in a different thread. There used to be a poster out here - Bartricks - who maintained that omnipotence meant that God could violate the laws of logic and create a 4 sided triangle. I cannot rule this out, but since us mere mortals are limited to 3 sided triangles I can agree to this.
Other than that - while I agree that omnipotence & omniscience necessarily rule out omni-benevolence, it seems to me that there are stronger (and simpler) arguments - based on the plain language definitions of the words.
Consider what is implied by this fanciful word omniscience. If you google the definition of omniscience you’ll get something along these lines - “the state of having total knowledge, the quality of knowing everything.” I take this definition at face value - everything means everything - there is nothing unknown. An omniscient entity knows the exact location and status of every last atom in the universe, every sub-atomic particle, every time a particle / anti-particle pair pops in and out of existence, etc. And not only that, our hypothetical omniscient entity knows the past history of these atoms, particles, etc - AND - the omniscient entity also knows the future state of same said particles.
Quoting Truth Seeker
What is “best”? Assuming that such an omniscient entity exists (again assuming for the moment that the phrase “omniscient entity exists” has some actual semantic meaning) we cannot possibly fathom what might motivate such entity. It is as if an amoeba were to try to predict the winner of next year’s World Cup. The nature of such an entity is beyond our comprehension. To assign the human character trait of benevolence to such an entity makes no rational sense. At best this appears to be some sort of category error.
So there is no need to postulate multiple omniscience entities to make your point, one is sufficient.
And we haven’t even mentioned omnipotence here. Omnipotence has it’s own set the definitional contradictions.
Quoting Truth Seeker
We’re in agreement here - at least re the OT God. The Skeptics Bible is an especially useful reference tool.
Here's Tennyson's take on "knowing":
"Flower in the crannied wall,
I pluck you out of the crannies,
I hold you here, root and all, in my hand,
Little flower-but if I could understand
What you are, root and all, all in all,
I should know what God and man is."
Of course the rhyme of "crannies" with "man is" is magnificent. But what does it even mean to "understand... all in all"? Does the creator of a thing "understand it all in all"? Did Tennyson understand his poem "all in all"? Or are there many interpretations and understandings?
If such a thing as omniscience is possible, then it is infinite and beyond human comprehension. Therefore, God's actions are impossible to judge, given our imperfect knowledge. The Christian must take His "benevolence" on faith, believing that if we knew the motives and results (if we had perfect knowledge) all would be clarified.
Firstly, my rebuttal of the OP made no mention of this: my rebuttal was that God cannot create a being that is omnipotent which was the crux of your argument. Secondly, God is goodness itself; and this is not analogical predication. In classical theism, God is goodness from which all else flows univocally.
However, thirdly, you are right that a lot of what we attribute to God is analogical in classical theism (such as being an intellect, will, powerful, etc.); but this doesn’t exempt God from moral responsibility. When I say God is pure intellect itself thinking, that is analogical predication; but in no way suggests that God is not an intellect. Your argument here hinges on the idea that if we know something analogically that is not in any way related to the analogy made; and this is contradictory to the idea of an analogy. An analogy is a similarity between two things. God being an intellect analogically means that there is something chiefly similar between Himself as a Person and us as persons (and this is why we are ‘made in the image of God’). Your rejoinder here is to say that because it is analogical we cannot say God is an intellect in any similar way to intellects we see in His creation; but that is to say that we cannot analogically predicate anything to God which was presupposed as true at the onset.
To answer each one-by-one:
God is responsible for His actions because His is absolutely free and a substance of a rational nature (viz., a person); but He never does anything immoral to hold Him accountable for (for reasons I already described).
Again, remember the difference between liberty of indifference vs. for excellence.
I am assuming you meant ‘permissibility’ here: permission implies some other authoritative person that permits one’s actions, whereas permissibility is about whether one in principle is permitted to do something (despite there being a person giving permission or not). Either way, in more mainstream classical theism, God can will lesser goods (unlike my view); and so He does have leeway to do morally permissible acts which are not the best acts. In my view, God always chooses what is best; so morally permissibility does not exist for God, and this is why I would view moral permissibility as a product of limited ethics (viz., we have the difference between supererogatoriness and permissibility on earth because we have a limited understanding of ethics and limited power to uphold it). I don’t think this damages God’s perfection: if you had perfect power and knowledge of what is good, then you would be obliged to do the best—not some lesser good.
I am not sure what you mean here: justification for what?
Yes we can and many have. Goodness is the equality of a thing’s essence and esse; and when we say we speak of God as ‘good’ analogically to His creation, we just mean that His creations are not perfectly good—they come at a lesser degree of goodness because they are not absolutely self-united. God is goodness itself in classical theism.
Again, by arguing that analogical knowledge severes our knowledge of the thing being analogically understood; you are denying that analogical knowledge is valid.
Again, yes we can. Justice is the treatment of something relative to what it is owed; and God has be creatively just and restoratively just. He is just in His creation powers, because He is a being of pure power—of creation abilities—and is purely actual; so He must be fully realized at being a creator and this entails that He cannot fail at creating thing’s properly to what He wills to create. Moreover, what He wills to create must be perfect because, again, He has to choose what is best (which is a creation ordered perfectly to Himself).
He is just in restoration because what is perfectly good is His initial creation so it must follow that (1) restoring each being back to that proper ordering is best when any being falls and (2) He must treat the being relative to its dignity since that is relative to its nature as a part of that perfectly ordered creation.
Classical theism does not ‘step out’ of morality to resolve the problem of evil: it shifts the focus from goodness being supervenient (like the monetary value of a diamond) to natural (like the shape of a diamond) and notes, correctly, that God is the perfect embodiment of what is good because His essence and existence are absolutely identical.
(emphasis added)
No, this is not what I said.
1. God has perfect knowledge of what is good.
2. God wills what He perceives as best.
3. Since God’s knowledge of what is best is perfect, what He perceives as best is best.
4. Therefore, what God wills is always what is best.
God’s perception of what is best is not the standard of what is best: His perfect knowledge of what is best, which is Himself, and the nature of an intellect entails that what He perceives as best will always align perfectly with what is best.
A tautology is when something is logically necessarily true (viz., in a truth table, every value is ‘T’ all the way down); and that is not true of what I said. I was tying knowledge of goodness with perception of goodness (in an intellect). God is by His nature perfectly good merely because His nature is such that He is absolutely simple; because, again, goodness is just absolute unity in classical theism.
You are thinking of this like a non-classicalist akin to a Protestant: something outside of God must be the standard of what is moral or God just is the Arbiter of morality (viz.,the euthyphro dilemma), but classical theism doesn’t fall prey to this—that’s a false dilemma.
I don’t need to do that: your OP argued that God should have created being omnipotent; and that is impossible.
There is no excess suffering in the world. Again, this bottoms out at the idea that you think that it is metaphysically possible for God to have created a better world of which you think would involve less suffering on earth; and I am pointing out that all you have demonstrated is that you can conceive of such a world but not that it is metaphysically possible.
This is the classic and vague new atheist technique to say that there’s pointless suffering in the world and that this means we aren’t in the best possible totality of creation; and from a classical theistic perspective there is no pointless suffering in the world nor is this world the totality of creation.
Of course, classical theists have their own arguments to get to such a God existing, and I can dive into those if you would like, but I do not need to demonstrate God exists to negate your OP.
Exactly. Allowing evil, at least in some stages and areas of creation, is necessary for higher goods; such as, to use on of your examples, the possibility of childhood cancer in order to have predictable natural laws and free will to love what is good.
If there were no possibility of childhood cancer, then we would all be robots without any free will to love what is good or evil. That’s the ‘better’ world you are arguing for here.
Sure, I agree: at face value, it seems like a hard pill to swallow and, for the record, I am not saying that objections relying on the problem of evil are all baseless or without merit. Yours, though, tried to posit that omnipotence is a feature God can create limited beings with; and that is not coherent.
God has deliberation: He has free will and in an absolute sense. What I was saying is that He always freely chooses what is best upon deliberation.
No. The Trinity unfolds necessarily from His nature, but He has free will to choose. My point was that, in God and uniquely in God, necessity and freedom ‘run right up onto each other’ as He necessarily freely chooses the best. He does not necessarily choose what is best; and He does not merely freely choose what is best. We do, by analogy, have the ability to freely choose what is best but in a limited way because we will only choose it if our knowledge of what is best is sufficient. So we do not necessarily always choose what is actually best despite always choosing what we perceive as best.
This is exactly why I noted the difference between FFE and FOI that you glossed over. You just implicitly conflated them by arguing that one is not truly free if they cannot choose otherwise from options; which is FOI, and my point was that classical theism rejects FOI. I don’t think freedom fundamentally consists in being able to have done otherwise nor to choose from options. If you take the FOI view as you did in the above, then God is absolutely unfree; whereas in FFE He is absolutely free.
No I did not: God is absolutely free because He is in the best state of being most conducive to His flourishing as an intellect. Again, FFE.
Agathology is not morality. Likewise, classical theism is tying agathology, morality, and God’s nature together in a coherent and beautiful way that avoids these issues you are having given that you are implicitly thinking of moral properties (metaethically) as if moral non-naturalism is true; and until you break out of that you will not be able to contend with classical theism properly—these objections you have made will continue to plague your mind.
First, appealing to The Marriage of Heaven and Hell is poetic, not explanatory. Blake was doing symbolic myth-making, not moral metaphysics. Saying “good and evil are flip sides of the same coin” is a metaphor. It does not establish that evil is necessary for good, only that humans often conceptualise value contrastively. That’s a psychological claim, not a moral or ontological one.
Second, the idea that “good would lose meaning if evil didn’t exist” confuses semantic contrast with moral necessity. We can meaningfully distinguish:
* pleasure without agony,
* health without disease,
* learning without trauma,
* love without abuse.
Parents don’t need to burn their children to teach warmth has value. A world with better states does not require horrific states to be intelligible. Contrast can be supplied by degrees of good, not by atrocities.
Third, claiming that “we don’t know how death feels to sentient beings” is evasive. We know quite a lot about dying: panic, suffocation, pain, terror, neurological distress. The fact that the dead cannot report afterward is irrelevant. If someone tortured a person to death and then said, “Well, they can’t complain now,” we would rightly call that monstrous. Ignorance after the fact does not erase suffering during the process.
Fourth, aesthetic deflection - “look at the moon and the stars” - is a category error. Natural beauty does not morally offset unnecessary suffering. A breathtaking sunset does not justify childhood leukemia, parasitic blinding diseases, or animals being eaten alive. This isn’t “whining”; it’s basic moral accounting.
Fifth, the “from God’s perspective” move quietly abandons omnibenevolence. If goodness only makes sense from God’s inscrutable viewpoint, then it is no longer meaningfully good in any sense we recognise. At that point, “God is good” becomes empty praise - indistinguishable from “God does whatever God does.”
Finally, quoting “Man was born to trouble” simply restates the problem. It doesn’t solve it. Saying “oh well” in the face of mass, involuntary suffering isn’t wisdom; it’s resignation dressed up as spirituality.
Life can contain wonder and be morally indictable. Recognising beauty does not require us to excuse cruelty baked into the system. If a being could reduce extreme suffering without losing anything of value and chose not to, we would not call that being good - no matter how pretty the night sky is.
That’s not arrogance. That’s ethical consistency. Please remember that at least 99.9% of all the species to exist so far on Earth are already extinct, and every second is full of suffering, injustice, and death for sentient biological beings who never asked for existence. I wish I had never existed in a world like this.
First, on omnipotence and logic:
I agree that “omnipotence constrained by logic” isn’t a defect; it’s the only definition that avoids incoherence. A being that can create square circles hasn’t transcended logic - it has destroyed meaning. At that point, words like power, creation, or existence stop referring to anything intelligible. So yes: logical constraint isn’t a limit on power; it’s a precondition for talking about power at all.
Second, your treatment of omniscience is mostly sound:
They know every fact.
They know what course of action is best, all things considered.
Exactly. And this is where the move to “we can’t fathom what motivates such an entity” quietly undercuts classical theism rather than rescuing it.
If “best” is so alien that it no longer tracks anything like wellbeing, harm reduction, fairness, or flourishing, then calling the entity benevolent becomes vacuous. You’re right: assigning human moral traits to a being whose motivations are radically inscrutable is a category error. But that cuts both ways: either benevolence means something recognisable, in which case massive preventable suffering is a problem, or benevolence means something utterly opaque, in which case saying “God is benevolent” conveys no moral information at all. You can’t keep the praise while discarding the content.
Third, you say omnipotence and omniscience “necessarily rule out omnibenevolence.” I disagree. They don’t logically rule it out, but they make omnibenevolence empirically implausible given the world we observe, unless one retreats into mystery so deep that moral language collapses.
That’s not a contradiction - it’s a reductio.
Finally, on the Biblical God: yes, judging a character by their recorded words and actions is basic moral reasoning. If a human ruler ordered genocide, endorsed slavery, and punished thought-crime, we wouldn’t excuse it by saying “his ways are higher.” Applying a different moral standard just because the agent is labeled “God” is special pleading.
Tools like The Skeptics Annotated Bible are useful precisely because they strip away the devotional framing and force the text to answer to ordinary ethical scrutiny - the same scrutiny we apply everywhere else.
So, overall: we agree more than we disagree. But once you admit that “benevolence” either has human-recognisable meaning or none at all, the classical omni-triad doesn’t merely wobble - it dissolves.
But here’s the problem: once you concede that omni-language is hyperbolic, you’ve already abandoned classical omnipotence and omniscience. You don’t get to then retain omnibenevolence in its strongest sense. The omni-package falls apart together or not at all.
Second, the Tennyson quote is beautiful, but it does no philosophical work here. Flower in the Crannied Wall is about epistemic humility, not moral exemption. Yes, total understanding may be impossible for finite minds. But moral judgment does not require total understanding. We judge actions by their foreseeable effects on sentient beings, not by omniscient insight into “all in all.”
If complete understanding were required before moral judgment:
* courts could never judge crimes,
* parents could never intervene in harm,
* ethics would be impossible.
Yet we rightly judge anyway because suffering, harm, and preventability are sufficient grounds.
Third, this claim is the crux, and it fails:
If omniscience is infinite and beyond human comprehension, God’s actions are impossible to judge.
No. What follows is this:
If God’s actions are impossible to judge, then claims about God’s benevolence are equally impossible to justify.
You can’t have it both ways.
If God’s goodness is meaningful, then it must connect to recognisable moral goods (wellbeing, harm reduction, fairness).
If God’s goodness is wholly inscrutable, then saying “God is benevolent” communicates nothing beyond “God does whatever God does.”
At that point, “benevolence” becomes a loyalty slogan, not a moral claim.
Finally, “taking benevolence on faith” is not an explanation - it’s a retreat. It asks us to suspend moral reasoning precisely where moral reasoning matters most: extreme, involuntary, preventable suffering.
Faith can motivate trust; it cannot retroactively turn horrors into virtues.
So yes, hyperbole, poetry, and mystery belong in religion. But once mystery is used to shield moral claims from evaluation, the concept of divine goodness stops being deep and starts being empty.
Let me be precise.
1. “God is goodness itself” does not rescue moral accountability.
You repeatedly assert that, in classical theism, God is goodness itself, and that goodness is the identity of essence and esse. This is a standard move in Thomas Aquinas. But notice what follows:
“Good” is no longer a normative concept involving welfare, harm, or obligation. It becomes a metaphysical predicate about unity, actuality, and self-identity.
At that point, calling God “good” is no longer a moral commendation. It is a statement like “God is simple” or “God is pure act.”
You cannot then also use “good” in the evaluative, action-guiding sense - praising God, defending His choices, or explaining suffering - without equivocation.
You say agathology ? morality. Fine.
But then stop making moral claims on agathological grounds.
2. Analogical predication does not save moral resemblance - it dissolves it.
You object that I misunderstand analogy. I don’t.
Analogical predication requires relevant similarity, yes, but relevant to what end?
You say:
God being an intellect analogically means there is something chiefly similar…
Yet every time a similarity threatens moral critique, you retreat to:
* divine simplicity,
* absolute perfection,
* metaphysical necessity,
* inscrutability of possibility space.
That means the analogy never licenses moral inference, only metaphysical labeling.
So again, either the analogy preserves enough similarity for moral assessment, or it does not.
You want similarity for praise, dissimilarity for critique. That’s asymmetric and ad hoc.
3. FFE does not ground moral responsibility - it abolishes it.
Your defense hinges on rejecting liberty of indifference (FOI) in favor of freedom for excellence (FFE).
But here is the unavoidable consequence:
If God:
* necessarily wills the best,
* cannot will otherwise,
* cannot revise,
* cannot refrain,
then, his “choice” is structural inevitability, not agency in any morally relevant sense.
Calling this “free” stretches the concept beyond recognition. Moral responsibility requires counterfactual sensitivity, alternative possibilities or responsiveness to reasons that could have gone otherwise.
FFE gives you metaphysical perfection - not moral praiseworthiness.
You can keep one. Not both.
4. “No excess suffering” is not a metaphysical claim - it’s a moral assertion.
You state:
There is no excess suffering in the world.
This is not derived from metaphysics. It is asserted to protect the system.
You offer no independent criterion for “necessary,” no non-circular account of why:
* childhood cancer,
* extreme congenital pain,
* animal predation,
* moral ignorance with eternal stakes
are required rather than merely permitted by your theory.
Appealing to “conceivability vs metaphysical possibility” does not help unless you provide positive constraints on what God could not have done - constraints that do not simply reduce to “because this world exists.”
Otherwise, “necessary” just means “actual.”
That is not explanation. It is restatement.
5. Free will does not require childhood cancer.
This claim:
If there were no possibility of childhood cancer, then we would all be robots…
is unsupported.
Free will does not logically require:
* pediatric oncology wards,
* congenital agony,
* animals dying slowly of parasites.
A world with:
* less extreme suffering,
* earlier deaths replaced by painless non-existence,
* narrower harm ranges
is plainly conceivable without eliminating agency. You assert impossibility without argument.
That is a theodical stipulation, not a metaphysical demonstration.
6. Classical theism avoids Euthyphro only by evacuating morality.
You say classical theism avoids Euthyphro by identifying goodness with God’s nature.
Yes, but the price is this:
* Moral goodness ceases to be an evaluative standard.
* “God is good” becomes non-informative.
* Moral language becomes descriptive of metaphysical structure, not prescriptive or critical.
At that point, the problem of evil is not solved. It is rendered meaningless.
Your system is internally consistent only because it no longer means what ordinary moral discourse means by:
* responsibility,
* goodness,
* justice,
* freedom,
* suffering.
That’s a valid philosophical move.
But then you must accept the consequence:
Classical theism does not defend a morally good God. It defines God beyond morality and then calls that “goodness.”
Once that is clear, the disagreement is no longer emotional or rhetorical - it is conceptual.
And on that level, the cost is far higher than you acknowledge.
100%.
Quoting RogueAI
I've enjoyed this thread, but with no real educational background in philosophy, some of the nuance is lost to me.
that said, your comment here is the one of the ones that struck me the most.
Quoting Truth Seeker
It feels to me like you are sure that he is not, and I agree with that. Taken literally, Old Testament God is a vengeful psychopath, and the new one is a neurotic jerk at best. (All divine entities fit this 'flawed' model to my mind).
I get that certain camps of believers choose to take holy texts literally, or feel compelled to do so, and I do not judge principled acts of faith. In other words, I get why the religious need / want to argue in literal terms, but why do you?
To me, it's just the story of (a) resilient belief system(s) married to the story of a remarkable human being, written down by less remarkable human beings at a tremendous distance from the events described. Any 'literal' value in the texts is entirely contingent?
I remain a staunch atheist, but I see tremendous moral value in these texts, because I don't take them literally.
I am sure you can offer meaningful perspective in response. Equally sure that the religious participants in this thread can do the same.
Question for anyone - Isn't belief in a God literally a choice to believe when no proof is possible?
Don't get me wrong - I love reading religious philosophy. The project of trying to establish proof for God is noble in its very impossibility?
Could you clarify this a little? What would constitute proof that a given entity exists? I assume you're not using "proof" in the logical sense of being entailed by premises.
I don't need to have it both ways. It's one way, or the other. The Christian (which I am not) who believes the Bible is the Word of God is confronted with claims of God's "benevolence" along with histories of floods and slaughters of first-born sons. He is required by his faith to accept that God's actions are benevolent. I'm no expert on Christian apologetics -- if I were I could quote chapter and verse. But the problem doesn't seem impossible.
"Good" and "evil" are subjective concepts. So are "pleasure" and "pain". It's not impossible that an all-knowing and all-powerful (or, at least, far smarter and more powerful being than you or I) would have a different opinion about God's supposedly evil acts. After all, we humans have differing opinions. Slavery was once considered perfectly acceptable. So were lots of other things we now abhor. Why is it so difficult to accept that "perfect judgment" might differ from ours, especially when it is combined with knowledge of things (like the afterlife) about which we are ignorant?
I agree though (as I stated earlier) that if "benevolence" is defined as "in line with God's will", then saying God is "omnibenevolent" is meaningless.
Thanks for the question J. I'm not confident in my deployment of logic, (or really the language of academic philosophy in general) so I should have used a different word than 'proof', particularly in this thread.
Central to my ability to respect an individual faith as one meaningful 'path' among others is the premise that nothing is objectively knowable, but the attempt to know 'better' is still essential. (does this make me an epistemic relativist)? The 'leap of faith' in choosing to believe something for reasons beyond what we can 'know' is what I admire in the religious.
And in the secular that can provide a reason for choosing to live ethically when life, to me, is inherently meaningless.
It is the choice to believe that I value. If there was proof, that 'choice' would belong to a different category?
I'm not following you, but perhaps I was not clear - the human trait of benevolence is recognizable - and yes "massive preventable suffering is a problem". Of course the precise nature of the "problem" depends on a person's beliefs. If you believe in the triad, then it is a clear logical contradiction which 2000 years of theological tongue twisting has not resolved. If you are a non-believer in a benevolent deity, then it is a human made problem which we humans are very bad at resolving. But that's for a different topic.
Quoting Truth Seeker I was trying to re-state something you said. As far as I'm concerned, you don't even need omnipotence - omniscience alone necessarily rules out omnibenevolence - again based on the plain language meaning of the two words - to which you seemed to agree with.
On free will: I don’t see why moral seriousness requires the possibility of irreversible catastrophe. We already accept bounded freedom everywhere else. Preventing extreme harm does not eliminate agency - it constrains it. If God can cap suffering without erasing choice, then allowing extreme suffering requires justification. If God cannot, omnipotence is lost.
As for belief: I don’t think belief is a simple choice. People choose how to act; they don’t choose what appears true to them. I share your admiration for religious philosophy as a human project - but moral critique becomes unavoidable once God is claimed as literally good and literally responsible for reality.
You say “good” and “evil” are subjective. If that’s true in the strong sense you’re invoking, then calling God good ceases to be a moral claim at all. It becomes either:
1. a statement of loyalty (“God is good because God does it”), or
2. a report of preference (“God approves of God’s actions”).
Neither is what classical theism means by omnibenevolence.
Appeals to historical moral disagreement (e.g. slavery once being accepted) don’t actually help here. Plenty of slaves opposed slavery even when slave-owners were pro-slavery. That example works against your point. We judge slavery wrong precisely because we think some moral judgments are better than others - more informed, more compassionate, more preventive of harm. If moral progress is real, then not all moral perspectives are equally valid.
You also appeal to possible hidden knowledge (afterlife, cosmic goods, etc.). But once moral justification depends on inaccessible information, the claim “God is benevolent” becomes unfalsifiable. And an unfalsifiable moral claim is indistinguishable from an empty one. At that point, we’re no longer talking about goodness as humans understand it - only about inscrutable power.
So I don’t think the dilemma is avoided. It sharpens:
* If “benevolence” has content that overlaps with human moral concepts (harm, suffering, flourishing), then God’s actions are at least partially judgeable - and some appear morally indefensible.
* If it has no such overlap, then calling God benevolent adds no moral information at all.
I agree with you on one important point: defining benevolence as “whatever aligns with God’s will” drains the term of meaning. But once that’s conceded, what remains isn’t a morally perfect being - it’s a morally opaque one, beyond praise as much as blame.
That may be a coherent theological position. It just isn’t a moral one.
I am not saying that benevolence is unintelligible as a human trait. Quite the opposite: I’m explicitly relying on its ordinary, recognisable meaning - concern for the well-being of others, aversion to unnecessary harm, preference for flourishing over suffering. On that, we agree.
Where we differ is this: once you retain that recognisable meaning, appeals to inscrutability no longer help.
To be precise:
* If benevolence is recognisable in human terms, then massive, preventable suffering is not merely “a problem depending on beliefs” - it is directly inconsistent with omniscience plus moral concern.
* If benevolence is redefined so that it can comfortably coexist with such suffering by appealing to unknown goods, hidden afterlives, or radically different values, then the term has lost its recognisable content - and saying “God is benevolent” ceases to convey moral praise.
That is the dilemma. I’m not asserting a contradiction by definition; I’m showing that you cannot preserve both moral content and total inscrutability.
You’re right that omniscience alone already creates the tension. An omniscient being:
* fully understands the suffering it allows,
* fully understands all alternatives,
* fully foresees all consequences.
Once that is granted, adding omnipotence only removes escape routes - it isn’t doing the main work. So if you read me as saying “omniscience alone rules out omnibenevolence given the plain meaning of benevolence,” that reading is accurate.
Where I resist is the move that treats this as merely a “belief-relative problem.” If benevolence has stable meaning - and you’ve said it does - then the evaluation follows from that meaning, not from prior atheism or theism.
So to be clear:
I’m not confused about the triad, and I’m not shifting topics. I’m pressing a single consistency claim:
You can either keep benevolence morally recognisable and accept the problem of suffering as decisive, or redefine benevolence so radically that the praise becomes empty - but you can’t do both at once.
If you think there’s a third option that preserves content and avoids that outcome, I’m genuinely open to hearing it - but it would need to be spelled out without appealing to moral opacity.
And here's what you said:Quoting Truth Seeker
While there is a different emphasis in your reply, I am not seeing any significant difference between these two statements. So my question to you is this: is there anything in what I have said which makes you think I would disagree with your statement? I.e. - that you can do both at once.
Let me make that explicit, because that’s where the confusion seems to be.
1. You and I agree on the core diagnosis.
When you say:
“If you believe in the triad, then it is a clear logical contradiction… If you are a non-believer in a benevolent deity, then it is a human made problem which we humans are very bad at resolving.”
and when I say:
“You can either keep benevolence morally recognisable and accept the problem of suffering as decisive, or redefine benevolence so radically that the praise becomes empty — but you can’t do both at once.”
we are saying the same thing in different registers.
You frame it as a dilemma between theism and non-theism.
I frame it as a dilemma internal to the concept of omnibenevolence.
But the logical structure is identical:
Either benevolence means something recognisable in moral terms, and the problem of suffering bites, or
Benevolence is redefined until it no longer functions as a moral term, and the praise collapses into vacuity.
So no, there is nothing in what you said that suggests you would disagree with my statement. On the contrary, you’ve already accepted it.
2. Where my formulation goes a step further without contradicting you.
The only thing I’m doing beyond your statement is closing a loophole that many theists try to leave open.
Your formulation allows a theist to say:
“Yes, there’s a contradiction if you assume benevolence means what humans mean by it — but God’s goodness is different.”
My formulation targets that move directly.
I’m saying: you don’t get to keep using moral praise language (“God is good,” “God is loving,” “God is worthy of worship”), while simultaneously denying that those terms have any shared evaluative content with human morality.
Once benevolence becomes wholly inscrutable, it stops doing the justificatory work believers want it to do. At that point, the problem of evil isn’t “answered” — it’s declared irrelevant by definitional fiat.
That’s not a different position from yours. It’s a clarification of why the escape hatch doesn’t actually escape anything.
3. Why I didn’t phrase it exactly the way you did.
You say:
“If you are a non-believer in a benevolent deity, then it is a human made problem which we humans are very bad at resolving.”
That’s true — but it shifts the focus from conceptual coherence to practical responsibility.
My focus in that particular exchange was narrower:
* not “who is responsible for suffering?”
* but “can the concept of an omnibenevolent God survive contact with morally recognisable suffering?”
Once the concept collapses, then your point follows naturally: suffering is a human (and natural) problem, and pretending there’s a benevolent cosmic manager just muddies accountability.
So again: no disagreement — just different stages of the same argument.
4. The clean answer to your question.
You asked:
Is there anything in what I have said which makes you think I would disagree with your statement?
No. If anything, your comment presupposes the very dilemma my statement makes explicit.
You and I are aligned on the core claim:
* The tri-omni God cannot retain morally meaningful benevolence in a world like this without contradiction.
* Attempts to save it either concede the problem of evil or hollow out “benevolence” until it no longer deserves praise.
The difference is rhetorical emphasis, not philosophical substance.
If anything, we’re arguing the same point from two sides of the same coin — and I see no daylight between them.