Plantinga’s Free Will Defense is not an argument for theism. The conclusion of the free will argument is that it is not logically impossible for God and evil to co-exist. That is an extremely modest conclusion on the part of the theist.
We observe a lack of evidence of contradictions in the concept of god; and absence of evidence is evidence of absence.
Of course the FWD increases our probability for God if we accept it; what else could it possibly do, decrease it? The most charitable interpretation I can put on your comment is that you are confusedly saying ‘yes, but it doesn’t increase it by much’ when I’m pointing out that ‘it increases by some non-zero amount, however modest that amount may be’.
gwern,
Plantinga’s Free Will Defense is not an argument for theism. The conclusion of the free will argument is that it is not logically impossible for God and evil to co-exist. That is an extremely modest conclusion on the part of the theist.
We observe a lack of evidence of contradictions in the concept of god; and absence of evidence is evidence of absence.
Of course the FWD increases our probability for God if we accept it; what else could it possibly do, decrease it? The most charitable interpretation I can put on your comment is that you are confusedly saying ‘yes, but it doesn’t increase it by much’ when I’m pointing out that ‘it increases by some non-zero amount, however modest that amount may be’.
Okay, I see what you mean. Thanks for clarifying!