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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    Statements
    321,452
    Perspectives
    108,905
    Topics
    42
    Rowe's argument for his first conclusion is difficult to ... — Carmelics
    Home/Problem of Evil
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

    Rowe's argument for his first conclusion is difficult to fault.

    Problem of Evil
    ?Rate how convincing each reason is below to see the overall strength.
    1 reason for
    2 reasons against

    Reasons For

    1 perspective
    Reason for
    ?
    • 1.Assumptions (1), (2), and (3) are plausible.
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    • 2.The logic of Rowe's argument is impeccable.
      ?

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    Reasons Against

    2 perspectives
    Reason against 1 of 2
    ?
    • 1.Rowe's assumption (1) that no good we know of justifies permitting certain suffering commits the informal fallacy of inference from ignorance.
      ?

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    • 2.Stephen Wykstra's CORNEA principle shows that humans lack the cognitive position to reliably detect whether God has sufficient reasons for permitting intense suffering.
      ?

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    • 3.Therefore, the plausibility of assumption (1) is undermined, making Rowe's first conclusion fault-worthy despite its surface logical validity.
      ?

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    Reason against 2 of 2
    ?
    • 1.Plantinga and van Inwagen argue that the total moral and spiritual value of a world with free creatures capable of significant good may require permitting horrendous suffering.
      ?

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    • 2.Rowe's argument presupposes an implausibly narrow conception of the goods that could justify suffering, excluding long-term soul-making goods defended by Hick and Swinburne.
      ?

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    • 3.Since assumption (3) restricts justifying goods too narrowly, the argument's premises are not jointly as plausible as claimed, making it genuinely faultable.
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    Topics

    Problem of Evil

    Related

    Assumptions (1), (2), and (3) are plausible.Plantinga and van Inwagen argue that the total moral and spiritual value of a wo...Rowe's argument presupposes an implausibly narrow conception of the goods that c...Rowe's assumption (1) that no good we know of justifies permitting certain suffe...
    +4 moreShow less
    Since assumption (3) restricts justifying goods too narrowly, the argument's pre...Stephen Wykstra's CORNEA principle shows that humans lack the cognitive position...The logic of Rowe's argument is impeccable.Therefore, the plausibility of assumption (1) is undermined, making Rowe's first...

    Similar

    Rowe's argument is unsound.79%Rowe's account of the reasoning involved may not be satisfactory.79%The logic of Rowe's argument is impeccable.77%Rowe's conclusion Q (that all further morally relevant properties will...74%

    Source

    AI-extracted
    SEP: evil

    Details

    Type
    claim
    Perspectives
    3 (1 for, 2 against)
    Edits
    1 edit