A guidance system isn’t required if there is no danger. So physical suffering still demands an explanation on the 3-omni sort of theism. — Astro Cat
If there's no pain, in all likelihood something really bad happens, The Congenital Analgesia link I posted gives you an idea of what a toy world might look like. — “Agent Smith”
At least any kind of God that most of us wouldn’t consider a monster.It appears that God's alleged omnipotence thwarts all attempts at crafting an argument in favor of God. — “Agent Smith”
At least any kind of God that most of us wouldn’t consider a monster. — Astro Cat
It's possible that a universe without the possibility of physical suffering would seem miraculous or a put-up job, and that God has good reasons for not "showing her hand".
— RogueAI
Interesting: so you propose that Divine Hiddenness isn't only a question (e.g., it is typically presented as a question: why, if there is a God, does it seem hidden?) but a means to some end (e.g., God obtains some purpose from being hidden) that's so overwhelmingly good that all the physical suffering in the world is worth it to have it?
Though if God acts in the interest of Himself and not for us in general, I’d argue that isn’t what we intuitively grasp as benevolence. — Astro Cat
To contrast the theodicy with "Every event has a cause" — Moliere
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.