Defence and development of Erik Wielenberg's argument re sceptical theism - forthcoming in Religious Studies
(revised 9 April 2014)
Sceptical theism and a lying
God – Wielenberg’s argument defended and developed
Stephen Law
Department of
Philosophy, Heythrop College, University of London, Kensington Square, London
W5 8HX UK
s.law@heythrop.ac.uk
Abstract: Sceptical
theists attempt to block the evidential argument from evil by arguing that a
key premise of that argument – that gratuitous evil exists – cannot reasonably
be maintained. They argue that, for all we know, our knowledge of reasons God may
have to permit such evil is radically incomplete. Thus the fact that we cannot
identify reasons for God to permit the evil we observe does not allow us
reasonably to conclude that no such reasons exist. In response, Erik Wielenberg
has pointed out what appears to be, for many sceptical theists, an unfortunate further
consequence of their position. According to Wielenberg, if sceptical theism is correct,
then, similarly, the fact that we cannot identify reasons why God would lie to
us does not allow us reasonably to conclude no such reasons exist. But then,
for all we know, God’s word constitutes not a divine revelation but a divine
lie. This paper examines sceptical theist responses to Wielenberg’s argument to
date (from Segal, and McBrayer and Swenson) and develops two new Wielenberg-style
arguments for the same conclusion.
Sceptical theism
Here is a simple evidential
argument from evil:
If
God exists, gratuitous evil does not exist
Gratuitous
evil exists
Therefore,
God does not exist
Gratuitous evil is evil such
that there is no God-justifying reason for him to permit it. Why suppose the
second premise of the above argument is true? Proponents sometimes offer a ‘noseeum
inference’[1]
in its support: If, after thinking hard, we cannot think of any God-justifying
reason for his permitting some evil, then it is likely that no such
God-justifying reason exists.
Sceptical theists attempt to
block this noseeum inference. According to sceptical theism, those goods,
evils, and entailment relations between them that we know of may, for all we
know, constitute the unrepresentative tip of a vast, largely hidden iceberg of
goods, evils and entailment relations. The latter, if they exist, will be known
to an omnipotent God, and may, for all we know, justify him in allowing those
evils we observe.
Thus (call this the anti-noseeum argument): If sceptical
theism is true, then the fact that we cannot think of any God-justifying reason
for his permitting some evil does not justify us in concluding that no such
reason exists. If by inscrutable evil
we mean evil for which we can discern no sufficient God-justifying reason, then
what the anti-noseeum attempts to block is, in effect, the inference from
inscrutable to gratuitous evil.
Analogies are often used to
explain and justify the sceptical theist’s scepticism regarding the noseeum
inference. The fact that we cannot detect any insects in the garage (when
taking a look from the street) does not allow us justifiably to conclude that
there are no insects in the garage. The fact that a chess novice cannot think
of a good reason why a chess Grandmaster made a particular move does not allow the
novice justifiably to conclude that no reason exists. Similarly, given our
ignorance concerning the completeness of our knowledge of goods, evils, and the
entailments relations between them, the fact that we can’t identify a reason that
would justify God, if he exists, in permitting some evil does not allow us justifiably
to conclude that no such reason exists. Thus we cannot reasonably assign any
probability to the second premise of our argument from evil: neither high, nor
low, nor middling. The probability remains, in this sense, inscrutable. But then our argument fails.
Wielenberg on divine lies
In
his paper ‘Skeptical Theism and Divine Lies’ (2010), Erik Wielenberg points out
what appears to be an interesting and, for many theists, deeply worrying,
consequence of sceptical theism. If the fact that we cannot think of a divine justification
for a given evil fails to justify the belief that no such justification exists,
then, presumably, the fact that we can’t think of a justification for God lying
to us fails to justify the belief that no such justification exists. So, if the
sceptical theist is to apply their scepticism consistently, they should
acknowledge that the probability that God is lying to us is similarly
inscrutable. But then, according to Wielenberg, sceptical theism has the consequence
that we cannot know any proposition that has word-of-God justification only. If
the only reason I have for believing that p
is that God asserts that p, but for
all I know God is lying to me, then I do not know that p. Sceptical theism, according to Wielenberg, is thus
at odds with any religious tradition according to
which there are certain claims that we can know to be true solely in virtue of
the fact that God has told us they are true. (2010, 509)
Such
claims appear to include, for example:
(L) All who believe in Christ will have eternal life.
A
Christian who, in response to the problem of evil, expresses scepticism about
our ability to discern what reasons God might have to allow some evil, but, in
response to God’s utterances, fails to be similarly sceptical about our ability
to discern what reasons God might have to lie to us about (L), would appear to
be employing their scepticism selectively - in an inconsistent and partisan
way. Once a theist employs sceptical theism to deal with the evidential problem
of evil, it appears they cannot also rationally maintain belief in propositions
that have word of God justification only, including (L). If, on the other hand,
they drop the sceptical theism to avoid this unpalatable consequence, they again
face the evidential problem of evil.
This
paper examines responses made by defenders of sceptical theism to Wielenberg’s
argument. To my knowledge, the only published responses are to be found in
McBrayer (2010), McBrayer and Swenson (2012) and Segal (2011). I argue that all
these responses either fail or else are can be sidestepped by modifying Wielenberg’s
presentation of his argument, modifications I therefore recommend. I begin with
Segal.
Segal’s response to Wielenberg
The sceptical
theist argues that if sceptical theism is true, then we cannot know, for any existent
evil, that there is not, or is unlikely to be, an adequate God-justifying
reason for it. In Theism and Divine
Truths (2011), Segal notes that Wielenberg presents a parallel argument for
the conclusion:
LIES: If sceptical theism is true, then we do not know
any proposition p which is such that
the only reason we have for believing that p
is God asserted that p.
As
Segal points out, Wielenberg maintains that the premises of his parallel
argument for LIES are at least as
plausible as those of the anti-noseeum argument. Thus, concludes
Wielenberg, if the sceptical theist accepts the conclusion of the anti-noseeum
inference, then they should accept LIES too. In response, Segal argues that Wielenberg
has not
given any argument whose premises are as plausible as
the premises of the anti-noseeum argument. So sceptical theists need not choose
between their argument … and their knowledge of propositions that have word-of-God
justification only. They can have both. (Segal (2011), 93)
I begin
by noting that the conclusion Segal draws in the above-quoted passage does not
follow. Suppose Segal is correct that the premises of Wielenberg’s parallel
argument are not as plausible as
those of the anti-noseeum argument. Still, Wielenberg’s premises might be eminently
plausible. But then Wielenberg might still have established beyond reasonable
doubt that sceptical theists must indeed choose between their argument and knowledge
of propositions having word-of-God justification only.
However,
as we will see, Segal believes he can show not just that the premises of Wielenberg’s
argument are less plausible than those of the anti-noseeum, but that some are implausible.
If Segal is right about that, Wielenberg’s argument does indeed fail.
The evolution of Wielenberg’s
argument
Wielenberg’s
argument has evolved. Consider, to begin with, the following two-premise version
presented to the 4th Philosophy of Religion conference at Baylor in 1989[2]
(let ST = sceptical theism):
(i) If ST is true, then, for any given divine
assertion D, we have no good reason to deny that God’s act of intentionally
speaking falsely in making D has beyond-our-ken justification.
(ii) If, for any given divine assertion D, we have no
good reason to deny that God’s act of intentionally speaking falsely in making
D has beyond-our-ken justification, then we do not know any proposition that
has word of God justification only.
(iii) Therefore, ST implies that we do not know any
proposition that has word of God justification only.
As it
stands, the argument faces a fairly obvious objection: even if we have no reason to deny with respect to any divine assertion that
God has good reason to lie, it doesn’t follow that we cannot know any
proposition that has word of God justification only. For perhaps we can still know
that, even when God is justified in lying, he rarely if ever does so. Thus,
even if sceptical theism is true, we might still know propositions having
word-of-God justification only. Call this the Justified-But-Doesn’t-Act (JBDA) objection.
By
the time it is published in ‘Skeptical Theism and Divine Lies’ (2010), Wielenberg
has amended his argument to deal with the JBDA objection. The published version
runs:
(1) If ST is true, then, for any divine assertion that
p, we lack justification for
believing that it is false or unlikely that God’s act of intentionally
asserting that p when p is false has beyond-our-ken
justification.
(2) If, for any divine assertion that p, we lack justification for believing
that it is false or unlikely that God’s act of intentionally asserting that p when p is false has beyond-our-ken justification then we do not know p if p
has word-of-God justification only (unless we have good reason for thinking
that, even if God has some justification for lying about p, God doesn’t act on that justification).
(3) So, ST implies that we do not know any proposition
that has word-of-God justification only (unless we have good reason for
thinking that, even if God has some justification for lying, God doesn’t act on
that justification).
(4) We do not have good reason for thinking that, even
if God has some justification for lying, God doesn’t act on that justification.
(5) Therefore, sceptical theism implies that we do not
know any proposition that has word-of-God justification only.
The above
version of Wielenberg’s argument is clearly more complex than the original. It involves
more premises. The second premise is also internally more complex: a
parenthetical clause has been added. This additional complexity is obviously introduced
in large measure to deal with the JBDA objection.
Segal
(2011) considers the published version of Wielenberg’s argument ambiguous and
provides two readings. Here I consider only the second reading (that which
Segal considers the more likely). Segal’s presentation involves the following
predicates: ‘Axp’ = x is a divine assertion that p; Lxp = x
is a divine lie that p; ‘LJGx’ = there is some good g, such that if x were a divine lie, g
would justify x. The argument runs:
(1b) If ST is true, then for any x and p such that Axp, we lack justification for believing
that Pr(LJGx/Axp) is low.
(2b) If for any x
and p such that Axp, we lack justification for believing that Pr(LJGx/Axp)
is low, then for any divine assertion that p,
we do not know that p if p has word-of-God justification only
(unless we have good reason for thinking that, even if God has some
justification for lying about p, God
doesn’t act on that justification).
(3) So, if ST is true, then we do not know any
proposition p that has word-of-God
justification only (unless we have good reason for thinking that, even if God
has some justification for lying about p,
God doesn’t act on that justification).
(4) For any divine assertion that p, we do not have good reason for thinking that, even if God has
some justification for lying about p,
God doesn’t act on that justification.
(5) Therefore, if ST is true, then we do not know of
any proposition that has word-of-God justification only.
Segal
goes on to target premises (1b) and (2b) of the above argument. He considers
neither premise plausible. I turn first to Segal’s claim that (2b) is
implausible.
Segal’s first criticism
Why does Segal consider (2b) is implausible? According to
Segal, because it relies on:
CLAIM: If for any divine assertion p, if we lack justification for
believing that the probability of there being a lie-justifying good is low and,
for any divine assertion p, we do not
have a good reason for thinking that if God has some justification for lying
about p, God doesn’t act on that
justification, then for any divine assertion, we lack justification for
believing either that the probability
of there being a lie-justifying good is low or that even if God has some
justification for lying about p, God
does not act on that justification.
But,
says Segal, CLAIM is implausible, for it is an example of the schema: if we
lack justification for believing that p
and we lack justification for believing that q, then we lack justification for believing either p or q. This schema has obvious false
instances (given I lack justification for believing p and also lack justification for believing not-p, it does not follow that I lack
justification for believing either p or not-p). Thus, says Segal, Wielenberg cannot rely on CLAIM.
Notice
that Segal’s first criticism exploits some of the complexity Wielenberg introduced
to deal with the JBDA objection. Specifically, it exploits Wielenberg’s introduction
of that parenthetical clause within the second premise.
I
believe Segal’s first objection is fairly easily sidestepped. The complexity
Segal targets in premise (2b) can be dropped. Wielenberg can instead narrow down
on the kind of reasons God might have to lie. Some reasons may be reasons such
that though they would justify God in performing an action, it is by no means
likely God will so act. Others reasons may such that, if they obtain, then it
is highly likely - even guaranteed - that God will act on them.
The
thought that there are reasons of the latter sort might well play a role in
setting up our evidential argument of evil in the first place. The first
premise is typically based on thought that we can sure that God, if he exists, will
act to prevent gratuitous evil. God, if he exists, has reason to prevent gratuitous
evil, reason he is guaranteed to act on. That’s why the existence of gratuitous
evil guarantees there is no God. Call reasons such that God is guaranteed to
act on them AG reasons
(act-guaranteeing reasons).
Now presumably
Wielenberg will suppose that if sceptical theism is true, then not only can we
not justifiably conclude that there are no reasons for God to perform a given action
a given only that we cannot think of
any, neither can we justifiably conclude that there are no AG reasons for God
to perform action a given only that we
cannot think of any. But then surely, given sceptical theism, there may, for
all we know, be not just reasons, but AG
reasons, for God to lie to us on a regular basis. But then, by recasting Wielenberg’s original argument so that the
focus is now specifically on AG reasons
to lie, the JBDA objection can be dealt with without introducing the complexity
targeted by Segal. Let ‘LAGRGx’ =
there is some good g, such that if x were a divine lie, g provides God with an AG reason to
assert x. Then, otherwise retaining
Segal’s style of presentation, we might rework Wielenberg’s argument like so:
(1c) If ST is true, then for any x and p such that Axp, we lack justification for believing
that Pr(LAGRGx/Axp) is low.
(2c) If for any x
and p such that Axp, we lack justification for believing that Pr(LAGRGx/Axp)
is low, then for any divine assertion that p,
we do not know that p if p has word-of-God justification only.
(5) Therefore, if ST is true, then we do not know of
any proposition that has word-of-God justification only.
Call
this the LIES argument.[3]
The LIES argument is structurally closer to Wielenberg’s two-premise original
than the published version. And, crucially, premise (2c) of the LIES argument is
immune to Segal’s first criticism (because it lacks that troublesome
parenthetical clause).
However,
the LIES argument won’t quite do as it stands. Premise (1c) is false. Suppose
God tells me that Paris is the capital of France. Then, notwithstanding
sceptical theism, given that I nevertheless possess good, independent,
non-word-of-God justification for supposing Paris is indeed the capital of
France, I can reasonably conclude that God lacks AG reason to lie to me about
this (for otherwise he would have done so). More generally, notwithstanding the
truth of sceptical theism, if God asserts that p and we possess non-word-of-God justification for p, then we possess justification for
believing that Pr(LAGRGx/Axp) is low. This flaw in the LIES
argument is easily corrected, however, by tweaking its premises slightly. Here
is one suggestion:
(1d) If ST is true, then for any x and p such that Axp and we lack non-word-of-God justification
for p, we lack justification for believing that Pr(LAGRGx/Axp)
is low.
(2d) If for any x
and p such that Axp and we lack non-word-of-God justification for p, we lack
justification for believing that Pr(LAGRGx/Axp) is low, then for any divine
assertion that p, we do not know that
p if p has word-of-God justification only.
(5) Therefore, if ST is true, then we do not know of
any proposition that has word-of-God justification only.
Call
this the LIES+ argument. The LIES+ argument is immune to Segal’s first
criticism. I suggest it has some prima facie plausibility.
To
summarize: Segal’s first criticism of Wielenberg’s argument targets a complexity
introduced by Wielenberg to deal with the JBDA objection. However, it appears Wielenberg
might easily deal with the JBDA objection by other means, thereby sidestepping
Segal’s criticism.
Segal’s second criticism
Let’s
now turn to what I consider to be Segal’s more substantive criticism. It turns
on the thought that the sceptical theist’s justification for believing what God
asserts need not be rooted in any noseeum inference. The sceptical theist need
not infer that, because they cannot think of a reason why God would lie about p, therefore there is unlikely to be a
reason for God to lie about p. True
enough, sceptical theism would indeed block that
inference, and thus that way of
justifying belief in God’s pronouncements. But perhaps the sceptical theist might
offer some other, independent justification for believing that p given only that God asserts that p? Segal illustrates as follows:
Suppose we have justification for believing –
regarding a particular divine assertion a
that p, where p has word-of-God justification only – that Pr (p/Aap)
is high. What are our justificatory grounds? Perhaps induction over all
assertions; perhaps induction over divine assertions; perhaps the fact that
lying is prima facie wrong and God is a morally perfect being; or perhaps some
combination of these. If we do have such justification, and we believe that p based on these grounds, then we know
that p. Or suppose Reid’s
non-reductionist account in the epistemology of testimony is correct, and no
independent positive reasons are required for believing that the testifier’s
assertion is true. If so, and we believe that p based on the divine assertion (and there are no undefeated defeaters),
then we know that p. (Segal (2011), 92)
Segal
then points out that, notwithstanding the truth of sceptical theism, if we do know
that p, then, assuming premise (2b) is
sound, we can use this knowledge to infer that either we have justification for
believing that Pr(LJGa/Aap) is low or that we have justification
for believing that God would not lie about p
even if he had a justification. But given premise (4) of Segal’s version of Wielenberg’s
argument, we lack justification for believing God would not lie about p even if he had justification. So we
can in turn infer that premise (1b) is false.
This
is an ingenious move. If the sceptical theist can know, for something like the
reasons Segal outlines, that p based
on no more than the divine assertion that p,
then they can use other premises of Wielenberg’s argument to infer that (1b) is
false. I note a similar but more direct inference might be made to refute premise
(1d) of the LIES+ argument: if I know that p
given only that God asserts that p, then
I can infer that the probability God has AG reason to lie about p is low.
Segal
concludes that, before Wielenberg is entitled to hold (1b), he needs to justify
the claim that, if sceptical theism is true, then none of these suggested accounts
of how one might know p given only
the divine assertion that p are
adequate. And this is something Wielenberg has not done or even attempted to
do.
As I
explain below, this second criticism overlooks that fact that Wielenberg presumably
considers sceptical theism to supply a defeater
for beliefs having word-of-God justification only. Moreover, it appears that, even
if Segal’s various suggested justificatory grounds are invoked, this defeater
remains effective.
Testimony and defeat
Consider
the following simple principle of
testimony. For any testifier t
and proposition p:
(PT) if t
asserts that p, then, ceteris paribus, it is reasonable to believe
both p and that one knows that p.
This
is an intuitively plausible principle. Perhaps it might be justified by
induction over all assertions. Or perhaps, even if no justification can be provided,
it constitutes a basic Reidian principle to which we are properly entitled. Perhaps
(PT) is a principle of ‘common sense’ epistemology we can rightly just take for
granted. Given (PT), does it follow that I can consider myself to know some
proposition given only that someone – such as God – has asserted it?
Not
necessarily. (PT)’s ceteris paribus
clause is obviously intended to cover situations in which one has a defeater
for ones beliefs that p and that one
knows that p. So, for example, if I
know, in a given instance, that t has
both a track record of dishonesty and excellent reason to lie to me on this
occasion, then it is no longer reasonable for me to suppose I know that p given only that t asserts p. Under these
circumstances, I possess a defeater both for the belief p and the belief that I know that p.
Suppose
Sally tells me that p. (PT) says that,
ceteris paribus, it is now reasonable
for me to believe both that p and
that I know that p. But of course, I
might yet come to possess a defeater for these beliefs. Suppose I go on to
discover that Sally’s assertion that p
was a result of the following process. Sally drew a ball randomly from an urn. I
have no idea whether or not all the balls in the urn are black, or none are
black, or some fraction between 0 and 1 are black. What I do know (perhaps
because I know Sally is currently involved in a some elaborate game of dare) is
that if Sally’s ball was black, she told me a lie and if it was not black, she told
me the truth.
So, setting
aside the fact that Sally did in fact assert that p, the probability that Sally lies on this occasion is otherwise inscrutable
to me. I cannot otherwise reasonably assign any probability to the claim that
Sally lies – neither high, nor low, nor middling. Given this information, can I
still reasonably believe both that p
and that I know that p given only
that Sally asserts that p?
Surely
not. Why not? Because for all I otherwise know Sally lies when she asserts that
p. The fact that the probability that
Sally lies is otherwise inscrutable to me provides me with a defeater for both those
beliefs.
But
now suppose that, in response to the above objection, I attempt to defend my
claim to know that p in the following
manner. Given (PT) plus the fact that Sally asserts that p, it is reasonable for
me to believe I know that p. But then
(given that I know that p, and that I
cannot know that p if the probability
that Sally lies is not low) I am entitled to conclude that the probability
Sally lies is not inscrutable, but
low.
Clearly,
such a response is muddled. It overlooks the fact that it appears to be a
condition of my knowing that p given
only that t asserts that p that the probability that t lies is not otherwise inscrutable.
Consider
a similar condition. It seems clear that, notwithstanding (PT) and the fact
that t asserts p, if I know the probability that t lies on this occasion is otherwise high, then I can’t reasonably believe I know that p (given only that t asserts p). For I now
possess a defeater for that belief. Notice I certainly can’t reasonably infer
that, given both (PT) and that t
asserts p, then the probability t lies is actually not high but low.
But then
it also seems clear that, not withstanding (PT) and the fact that t asserts p, if the probability that t
lies on this occasion is otherwise inscrutable
to me, then, again, I can’t reasonably believe I know that p (given only that t asserts p). Again, it
seems I possess a defeater. That’s why my discovering the backstory to Sally’s
assertion provides me with a defeater for what she asserts.
Now
consider God’s divine assertion that p.
Does (PT) allow me reasonably to believe that I know that p given only that divine assertion? Not, it seems, if I also know that
sceptical theism is true. For then I know that the probability that God has AG
reason to lie on this occasion, and thus lies, is indeed otherwise inscrutable.
If my only reason for believing p is
that God asserts that p, then sceptical
theism provides me with a defeater for both my belief that p and my belief that I know that p.[4]
So, even
if (PT) can be justified by induction over all assertions and/or even if (PT)
can rightly be accepted with justification, it appears that, given sceptical
theism, I can’t reasonably believe propositions having word-of-God
justification only.[5]
Note
that the above point concerning defeaters for beliefs that would otherwise be justified
by (PT) suggests an alternative argument for Wielenberg’s conclusion. It
appears, intuitively, that something like the following principle of defeat is
correct. For any proposition p and
testifier t:
(D): If t
asserts that p, and t’s asserting that p is one’s only justification for believing that p, then the fact that the probability
that t lies on this occasion is
otherwise inscrutable provides one with a defeater
for the belief that p.
I
take it that something like (D) was presupposed by Wielenberg even in his
original presentation (presumably, something like (D) lies behind Wielenberg’s second
premise, and something like (D) might in any case be used to justify premise
(2d) of the LIES+ argument[6]).
(D)’s role can be made explicit in a Wielenberg-style argument by combining it
with (as a second premise):
If ST, then (except when there is some independent
reason to think that what is asserted is true) the probability that God lies on
any given occasion is otherwise inscrutable.
In
the absence of any defeater-defeater, Wielenberg can now conclude:
Thus, if ST, one does not know that p given only that God asserts p.
The
second premise can, in turn, be supported by:
If ST, then (except when there is some independent
reasons to think that what is asserted is true) the probability God has AG
reason to lie on any given occasion is otherwise inscrutable.
Call
this the DEFEATER argument (n.b. the parenthetical clauses are required because,
as we noted earlier, if we have independent reason to think p is true, then we have independent
reason to think God does not lie, and thus independent reason to think God
lacks AG reason to lie).
Of
course, in response to the DEFEATER argument, the sceptical theist might
attempt to supply some defeater-defeater. Perhaps there is some consideration
they can point to that has the consequence that the defeater generated by their
sceptical theism for propositions having word-of-God justification only is
itself defeated. But, assuming the DEFEATER argument is sound, the onus is now
very much on the sceptical theist to supply such a defeater-defeater. Until
they do so, their belief in propositions having word-of-God justification remains
defeated.
In
short, it appears that, given (D) and a plausible no-defeater condition on
knowledge, sceptical theists cannot know propositions having word-of-God
justification only.[7]
Induction over divine assertions
What
of Segal’s suggestion that we might still justify belief in God’s assertion
that p by induction, if not over all
assertions, then at least over divine
assertions? Of course, this would require we have grounds for believing God
tells the truth on at least some occasions. But where we have independent
reason to believe that what God has asserted is true, we do possess such
grounds. Arguably, this is the case for some, perhaps even many, divine
assertions. So, if we know that God has not lied when it comes to those
assertions we can independently verify, then we know God lacks AG reason to lie
on those occasions (for he would otherwise have lied). And if we know God lacks
AG reason to lie on those occasions, why can we not inductively generalize and justifiably
conclude that he is unlikely to possess AG reason to lie on those occasions when
he makes assertions the truth of which we cannot independently verify?
Unfortunately
for the sceptical theist, this inference is also blocked by their sceptical
theism.[8]
Suppose
God makes ten assertions of which we are able independently to verify that
seven are true. Given God’s established track record of honesty, are we not
justified in believing his remaining three assertions? Not, it appears, if sceptical theism is true. For
consider the possibility that God has AG reason to deceive us by lulling us
into a false sense of security, much as confidence tricksters do. Given
sceptical theism, it won’t do to argue that if we are unable to think of an AG reason
for God to engage in such deception then there’s unlikely to be such a reason.
But then how are we able reasonably to believe that the probability that such an
AG reason exists is low?
Suppose
Bert makes ten assertions, seven of which I am able independently to verify are
true, the remaining three of which I am otherwise in the dark about. Can I
reasonably believe the remaining three assertions? Ceteris paribus, of course I can. But now suppose I discover that,
for all I know, Bert is a scammer engaged in a confidence trick of which I am
the unwitting victim. For all I know, my verification of Bert’s other seven assertions
is intended by Bert to play a confidence-building role in his deception. The
probability that Bert is engaged in such a deception is otherwise inscrutable
to me. I can reasonably assign no probability to Bert’s thus deceiving me:
neither high, nor low, nor middling. Surely, given the inscrutability of this
probability, I possess a defeater for those remaining three beliefs,
notwithstanding the fact that I have independently verified the truth of Bert’s
other seven assertions.
But
then similarly, given the inscrutability of the probability that God has AG
reason to engage in a similar deception, we possess a defeater for those of
God’s assertions we have not independently verified, notwithstanding the supposed
fact that we have been able to verify some or even most of God’s other
assertions.
The relevance of God’s moral
perfection
Segal
makes one other suggestion regarding how we might come to know that p given only that God asserts that p. As Segal points out in the above
quotation, God is not any old testifier. He is a morally perfect testifier. But then, given the wrongness of lying,
perhaps the sceptical theist can still reasonably believe God is unlikely to
lie even when he has reason to? And thus the sceptical theist can still
reasonably believe propositions having word-of-God justification only?
There
may be some plausibility to the suggestion that, when it comes to non-AG reasons to lie, a morally perfect
God is unlikely to act on them. However, the LIES+ and DEFEATER arguments are
both immune to the above line of attack. That is because both arguments focus
specifically on AG reasons to lie.
Perhaps the fact that God is a morally perfect being should lead us to assign a
low probability to God’s lying when he has non-AG reason to lie. However, that
same fact should vastly increase our confidence that, if there is a reason for
God to lie such that lying is morally the right thing to do, then God will act
on that reason. We can be confident God acts on such reasons not in spite of but because of his morally perfect nature. Indeed, trivially, if there
are AG reasons for God to lie, then he is guaranteed to lie. And it appears
that, if sceptical theism is true, then (except when there is some independent
reason to think that what is asserted is true) the probability that there exist
AG reasons for God to lie is inscrutable. But then, given (D), sceptical theism
provides a defeater for propositions having word-of-God justification only,
notwithstanding God’s moral perfection.
Conclusions regarding Segal’s
critique of Wielenberg
I
draw the following conclusions regarding Segal’s objections to Wielenberg’s
argument (as Segal presents it above).
Segal’s
first criticism targets premise (2b). More specifically it exploits a
complexity introduced by Wielenberg in order to deal with the JBDA objection. I
have explained that there is another way of developing Wielenberg’s original
argument to avoid the JBDA objection that sidesteps Segal’s first criticism
(the LIES+ argument) yet still produces a plausible-looking argument.
Segal’s
second criticism involves his outlining various justifications that may be open
to theists for believing propositions having word-of-God justification only –
justifications Segal believes Wielenberg must rule out before he can claim to
have shown that sceptical theism undermines knowledge of such propositions. I
believe this second criticism fails. Segal’s suggested justifications all run
into the same fundamental problem: that, even granted (i) the plausibility of
(PT), (ii) God’s supposed track record of telling the truth, and (iii) the fact
that God is morally perfect, etc., sceptical theism nevertheless appears to supply a defeater for
propositions having word-of-God justification only. That sceptical theism supplies
such a defeater is, I take it, Wielenberg’s fundamental point[9].
In which case, Segal fails to deal with that point.
Perhaps
many theists do reasonably believe propositions possessing word-of-God
justification only. Perhaps they do quite properly justify their belief in such
propositions in the ways sketched out by Segal. However, if such a theist goes
on to embrace sceptical theism in order to try to deal with the problem of
evil, then, notwithstanding the fact that they happen to employ one or indeed
all of Segal’s various suggested justificatory grounds, their sceptical theism nevertheless
appears to supply them with a defeater for beliefs having word-of-God
justification, just as Wielenberg supposes. Indeed, it appears that, given this
defeater (and, of course, no defeater-defeater) it is irrational for such a
sceptical theist to continue to maintain they know propositions having word-of-God
justification only.
The
LIES+ and DEFEATER arguments appear immune to Segal’s objections[10].
Of course, it remains open to Segal to argue that the premises of the LIES+ and
DEFEATER arguments are implausible, or at least not as plausible as those of the sceptical theist’s
anti-noseeum argument. However, even if Segal could show that the premises of the
LIES+ and DEFEATER arguments are not as plausible
as those of the anti-noseeum, they might still successfully justify
Wielenberg’s conclusion. Suppose it is highly plausible that the premises of
either the LIES+ or DEFEATER argument are all true. Then, even if those
premises happen not to be quite as plausible as those of the anti-noseeum, they
might still establish beyond reasonable doubt that sceptical theism generates a
defeater for propositions having word-of-God justification only.
The McBrayer/Swenson response
to Wielenberg
I
turn now to the criticism of Wielenberg’s argument presented in McBrayer (2010)
and then McBrayer and Swenson (2012). McBrayer and Swenson maintain that, for religiously
mainstream monotheists who employ sceptical theism to deal with the problem of
evil, Wielenberg’s argument ‘is not as scary as it first appears’ (McBrayer and
Swenson (2012), 148). They begin by acknowledging that the sceptical theist
should grant the possibility of
divine lies:
(o)ther things being equal, God would, of course, tell
us only what was true. This isn’t an all-things-considered judgement but a ceteris paribus one. Only the former is
off limits according to sceptical theism. But since we’re in no position to
determine whether or not the ceteris
paribus clause is met, we should allow that it is possible that God is
lying to us. (McBrayer and Swenson (2012), 148)
McBrayer and Swenson then suggest that, given that we at
least know that, ceteris paribus, God
would tell us the truth, we can remain justifiably confident about the truth of
his pronouncements, just as we can remain justifiably confident about the
pronouncements of other people even while acknowledging the possibility that they are lying:
People have deceived us in the past. And in many
cases, we simply can’t tell whether they are being deceitful in any given
instance. And yet we think it’s perfectly rational to accept the testimony of
such people. Thus it is appropriate to accept testimony in general even though
we know that it is possible the testimony is misleading. Given this epistemic
fact, it is also appropriate to accept the testimony of God even though we know
that it is possible that God is deceiving us. (McBrayer and Swenson (2012), 148)
Why the McBrayer/Swenson
response to Wielenberg fails
This
response to Wielenberg also fails. To begin with, let’s unpack McBrayer and
Swenson’s ceteris paribus claim about
what God would do. The claim is:
(G) Ceteris
paribus: God would tell us only what was true[11]
How
should (G) be understood? Ceteris paribus
claims often take the form of generalizations that license predictions.
Consider:
(T) Ceteris
paribus: cats live more than six years
On
perhaps the most natural reading of (T), the claim is that, as a general rule
(usually, setting aside a few exceptions), cats do live more than six years. Thus understood, (T) licenses
predictions. It allows me justifiably to conclude that my cat Tiddles will, or
will probably, live more than six years (assuming, of course, that I have no reason
to believe or suspect that the ceteris
paribus clause applies).
However,
ceteris paribus claims don’t always
license predictions. Consider:
(J) Ceteris
paribus, John would be naked at home
Given
its subjunctive mood, (J) would not ordinarily be understood to license the
prediction that, as John is home, he is, or is probably, naked. The suggestion,
presumably, is not that, as a general rule (setting aside a few exceptions)
John is naked at home. (J) allows for
the possibility - and might well be taken to imply - that other things rarely,
if ever, are equal. Perhaps, though being naked is John’s strong preference,
John does not live alone and, out of courtesy to his easily offended cohabitees,
he usually remains clothed.
Now consider
McBrayer and Swenson’s (G). How should it be understood? Like (J), it is
subjunctive in mood, speaking not of what is the case, but of what would be the
case. Thus, on its most natural reading, (G) does not assert or imply that as a
general rule God tells the truth. Even granted (G), God’s telling the truth may
be the exception rather than the rule.
But
then, thus understood, it’s hard to see how (G) provides McBrayer and Swenson
with a basis for an effective response to Wielenberg. (G) no more justifies our
believing that, as God asserts that p,
p is true than (J) justifies our
believing that, as John is home, John is naked.
But
perhaps, appearances to the contrary, McBrayer and Swenson intend (G) to be
understood as asserting or supporting a generalization about what God does: as
a general rule God tells the truth. But if that is how (G) should be read,
then, given sceptical theism, it is hard to see how McBrayer and Swenson can
know that it is true. For sceptical theism does not merely have the consequence
acknowledged by McBrayer and Swenson: that it is possible that God has AG reason to lie about things that we
otherwise lack reason to think are true (a possibility that is consistent with
our nevertheless having good reason to think that the probability he lies is not
inscrutable or low). Sceptical theism also appears to have the far more serious
consequence that the probability that there are such AG reasons is inscrutable. And, given the principle of
defeat (D), that in turn provides the sceptical theist with a defeater for
beliefs having word-of-God justification.
What
of the suggestion made in the second quotation above? McBrayer and Swenson
suggest that it is, ceteris paribus,
reasonable to accept the testimony of other people. Thus it is reasonable to
accept the testimony of God.
This
manoeuvre was dealt with earlier. McBrayer and Swenson are here appealing to
something like the principle of testimony (PT). Perhaps that principle is
correct. However, (PT) does not allow us reasonably to believe propositions
having word-of-God justification if sceptical theism nevertheless supplies a
defeater for such beliefs, which it appears it does.
Conclusion
This
paper defends Wielenberg’s conclusion that if sceptical theism is true then we
can’t know propositions having word-of-God justification only and explains why I
believe it is correct. The thus-far published criticisms of Wielenberg’s
argument either fail or else can be fairly easily sidestepped by modifying the
argument. What all these critics overlook is (and I take this to be
Wielenberg’s fundamental point) that sceptical theism appears to supply a defeater for beliefs having word-of-God
justification only. This defeater defeats such beliefs whether or not the
sceptical theist attempts to justify their trust in God’s pronouncements by
appeal to some combination of the principle of testimony, God’s morally perfect
nature, and/or some supposedly established track record of divine truthfulness.
References
BEAUDOIN, JOHN (2005)
‘Skepticism and the skeptical theist’. Faith
and Philosophy, 22, 42-56.
BERGMANN, MICHAEL (2001)
‘Sceptical theism and Rowe’s new evidential argument from evil’, Nous, 35, 278-296.
(2009) ‘Skeptical theism and the problem of
evil’, in Thomas Flint and Michael Rea (eds.) Oxford Handbook to Philosophical Theology (Oxford: Oxford
University Press), 374-99.
FALES, EVAN (2002) ‘Darwin’s
Doubt, Calvin’s Calvary’, in James Beilby (ed.), Naturalism Defeated? (Ithica, NY,Cornell University Press, 2002),
55-56.
GALE, RICHARD (1996) ‘Some difficulties in
theistic treatments of evil’, in Daniel
Howard-Snyder (ed.) The Evidential Argument From Evil (Indianapolis, IN: Indiana
University Press, 1996), 206–18.
MCBRAYER, JUSTIN (2010)
‘Skeptical theism’, Philosophy Compass,
5/6, 611-623.
(2012) ‘Are skeptical theists really skeptics? Sometimes yes
and sometimes no’, International Journal
of the Philosophy of Religion, 72,
3-16.
MCBRAYER, JUSTIN AND SWENSON,
PHILIP (2012) ‘Scepticism and the argument from divine hiddeness’, Religious Studies 48, 129-150.
SEGAL, AARON (2011) ‘Sceptical
theism and divine truths’, Religious
Studies 47, 85-95.
PLANTINGA,
ALVIN (1986) ‘The Foundations of Theism: A Reply’, Faith and Philosophy
3, 310-312.
WYKSTRA, STEPHEN (1996)
‘Rowe’s noseeum arguments from evil’, in Daniel Howard-Snyder (ed.) The Evidential Argument From Evil (Indianapolis, IN: Indiana
University Press, 1996), 126-150.
ROWE, WILLIAM (1979) ‘The
problem of evil and some varieties of atheism’. American Philosophical Quarterly, 16, 335-341.
(1988) ‘Evil and theodicy’. Philosophical Topics, 16,
119-132.
(1991) ‘Ruminations about evil’, Philosophical Perspectives, 5,
69-88.
WIELENBERG, ERIK (2010)
‘Sceptical theism and divine lies’, Religious
Studies, 46, 509-523.
[1]
Wykstra (1996) coined the
expression ‘noseeum inference’. The argument is employed by Rowe (1979 1988,
1991).
[2]
Available to download at: www.baylor.edu/content/services/document.php/78449.doc (accessed 3rd April 2014)
[3]
Though see note 7 on how I
would intend this argument to be understood.
[4]
Note that were one to insist
that the mere inscrutability of the probability that God lies fails to provide
one with a defeater for ones belief in the truth of his assertion (e.g. one
insists instead that the probability God lies must be known to be at least
middling before one has a defeater), then why shouldn’t the proponent of the
noseeum inference similarly insist that the mere inscrutability of the
probability that God has AG reason to allow the evils that exist fails to
provide us with a defeater for our belief that there no such reasons. Beaudoin
makes this point (Beaudoin (2005), 47).
[5]
I note that sceptical theism also appears to provide a defeater for beliefs
about the external world. If, for all I know, God has AG reason to deceive me
perceptually about the character of the external world (much as Descartes’s
hypothetical Evil Demon does, though in this case for good rather than evil
reasons) then how can I reasonably take my perceptual experiences at face
value?
In response to this worry, the
sceptical theist might make a move analogous to that that made by Segal in
response to Wielenberg. They may insist that their knowledge of the external
world is not threatened by sceptical
theism precisely because their knowledge of the external world is not based on a noseeum inference (e.g.
an inference such as: ‘I can’t think of any reason why God would radically
deceive me about the external world, therefore it’s unlikely there is such a
reason’). Just this suggestion is made by Bergmann:
The skeptical
theist’s reply is to note that our way of knowing that E5 [My being a bodiless
victim of an evil demon who deceives me into thinking there’s an external
physical world when in fact there is not] [is not] actual is not by
considering possible goods, possible evils, and entailments between them—seeing
that these provide no God-justifying reason to permit the obtaining of E5...
Not at all. Rather, we have some independent way of knowing that E5 [is not]
actual and we can conclude, from the fact that they aren’t actual, that if God
exists, he has no good reason to arrange for them to be actual. (Bergmann (2009),
391)
What might this ‘independent way’ be? Well, just as Segal
suggests a principle of testimony to
deal with sceptical theism related concerns re God’s testimony, so the
sceptical theist might also appeal to a principle
of credulity to deal with sceptical theism related concerns about knowledge
of the external world. E.g. (for any belief p):
(PC) if it appears clear to one that p,
then, ceteris paribus, it is
reasonable to believe that p and that
one knows that p.
Thus, concludes our sceptical theist, if it appears to them
that there’s a table before them, then ceteris
paribus it’s reasonable for them to believe there’s a table present,
notwithstanding their sceptical theism. Our sceptical theist may then conclude
that as they do know such things about the external world, but can possess such
knowledge if God has no reason to deceive them, that God, if he exists, has no
reason to deceive them.
But now a similar problem arises
to that which undermines Segal’s parallel appeal to a principle of testimony.
(PC)’s ceteris paribus clause is also
obviously intended to cover situations in which one possesses a defeater for p, and, when it comes to beliefs about the external world, such a defeater is precisely what
sceptical theism appears to generate. If sceptical theism is true then, for
all we otherwise know, God has AG reason to generate radically deceptive
appearances of external reality. But if the probability that God has such AG
reasons to deceive is inscrutable to us, then surely we possess a defeater for
our beliefs about the external world notwithstanding
the truth of (PC). Given sceptical theism, I can no more reasonably trust
my perceptual experiences than I can reasonably trust what Sally says once I
know the backstory to her utterances. Notice that, also notwithstanding the
truth of (PC), a similar scepticism looms regarding beliefs grounded in
religious experience.
The worry that given sceptical theism then for all we
know God has reason to give us unreliable cognitive faculties has been raised
before, including by Evan Fales:
….
If God can see fit to allow small children to die of terrible diseases
for some greater good we cannot imagine, might He not have given us radically
defective cognitive systems, and allowed us to be lulled into thinking them
largely reliable, also for some unimaginable reason? (Fales (2002), 56)
Indeed, that, for all we know, God has good reason to give
us unreliable cognitive faculties is
conceded even by some sceptical theists. McBrayer and Swenson, for example,
question Alvin Plantinga’s assumption that God would likely give us reliable
cognitive faculties:
What a sceptical theist is committed to…is a general scepticism about our
knowledge of what God would do in any particular situation. We don’t think that atheists
or theists can say with any serious degree of confidence why God does what he
does or why he would or wouldn’t do a certain thing… Alvin Plantinga assumes
that if God exists it is obvious that our belief-forming faculties are reliable
(Plantinga (2000)). Given our scepticism, we are not sanguine about [that]
inference (God might well have other interests, motives, etc. than the few that
we are able to decipher). (McBrayer and Swenson (2012), 145)
Still, McBrayer and others have developed responses to the
objection that sceptical theism must lead to scepticism about the external
world. McBrayer, for example, makes an intriguing appeal to context and
contrast in order to try to prevent his sceptical theism generating a global
sceptical threat (see McBrayer (2012)). Whether or not McBrayer’s or some other
response succeeds in dealing with the threat of runaway scepticism is a
question I shall address more fully in another paper. Here I merely flag up (i)
the apparent threat to knowledge of the external world (etc.) posed by
sceptical theism and (ii) the inadequacy of the above appeal to (PC) in order
to try to neutralize that threat. My thanks to an anonymous reviewer for
drawing my attention to the importance of flagging (i).
[6]
Premise (2d) of the LIES+
argument will of course be justified by the thought that the fact that we lack
justification for believing Pr(LAGRGx/Axp) is low provides us with a defeater for p if p has word-of-God
justification only. It appears the LIES argument will then succeed in the
absence of any defeater-defeater, the onus now being on the sceptical theist to
provide some such defeater-defeater (which Segal has not done). That, at least,
is how I would intend the LIES+ argument to be understood. See below.
[7]
By a ‘defeater’ I here mean what is often
called a mental state defeater. Such
defeaters neutralize the justification or rationality beliefs otherwise
possesses. Given some plausible no-defeater condition on knowledge (such as: S knows
that p only if S does not have a mental state defeater for S’s
belief that p), then, given their sceptical theism supplies them with a
defeater for beliefs having word-of-God justification, sceptical theists do not
know propositions having word-of-God justification only.
Defeaters can be defeated. Suppose the widgets on the
assembly line clearly appear red to me. Given some principle of credulity (such
as: (PC) if it appears clear to
one that p, then, ceteris paribus, it is reasonable to
believe that p and that one knows
that p.) it’s now reasonable for me to believe the widgets are red.
But suppose I am informed the widgets are illuminated by a red light and so
would appear red even if they were white. This new belief supplies me with a
defeater for my original belief. Of course this defeater might in turn be
defeated (I might subsequently be informed that the electricity supply to the
red light is currently switched off).
What I point out in the main text here is, in effect, that
Segal’s suggestions fail, both individually and collectively, to supply a
defeater for the defeater that sceptical theism supplies for beliefs having
word-of-God justification. It appears that, until the sceptical theist supplies
some such defeater-defeater, those beliefs remain defeated. And thus, given a
no-defeater condition on knowledge, the sceptical theist cannot know any
proposition having word-of-God justification only.
Of course, as I point out in the main text, the sceptical theist
might yet supply some successful defeater for the defeater that sceptical
theism otherwise supplies for beliefs possessing word-of-God justification
only. However there are few even half-plausible candidates. Indeed, I can think
of only one serious contender. The sceptical theist might insist that God is
somehow able to reveal directly to them (perhaps through the internal instigation
of the Holy Spirit) that he speaks truly. On Plantinga’s view (1986), while I
might be presented with impressive evidence that I am the guilty person in a
court case in which I am accused of murder, I can still know that I am innocent
if I can clearly remember being innocently occupied at the time the murder took
place. The evidence presented in court does not defeat my belief in my
innocence given the latter belief’s very considerable non-propositional
warrant. But then, similarly, perhaps the sceptical theist’s scepticism fails
to supply a defeater for their belief in propositions having word-of-God
justification if their belief in the truth of those propositions is grounded in
some sufficiently authentic-seeming religious experience?
Perhaps the most obvious problem with the above suggestion
is that given sceptical theism then, for all we know, God has AG reason not
only to lie to us, but also to supply us with such powerful,
seemingly-revelatory but nevertheless deceptive experiences. That sceptical
theism does indeed similarly supply a defeater for beliefs grounded in such
supposedly revelatory experiences is a suggestion I will expand upon and defend
in another paper (though see note 3 above).
It remains the case, however, that until the sceptical theist supplies a good case for their being in
possession of a defeater for the defeater otherwise supplied by sceptical
theism for beliefs having word-of-God justification only, such beliefs are,
indeed, defeated.
[8]
There are other difficulties too. I might
also draw attention to the fact that establishing that God has told the truth
on a sufficient number of occasions to establish a track record of honesty is
in any case beset with practical problems. Before we can assess how many of
God’s pronouncements have been independently verified, we must first turn to
various historical and other experts, etc. to establish which of the many
pronouncements attributed to God are actually genuine and precisely what they
mean (e.g. exactly what they predict, if anything). These are not easy tasks.
There is considerable disagreement even amongst theistic historians about which
pronouncements are genuine, what they mean, and whether or not they have in
fact been independently verified. Beaudoin expresses both this worry (Beaudoin
(2005), 47) and also a more traditional concern about
…tying one’s faith in God or his revelation to the results of empirical
investigations by historians and scientists: if a skeptical theist’s confidence
in the truth of God’s uncheckable revelations must rise and fall with the
vicissitudes of historical scholarship, for example, then he is likely to find
himself always vacillating between belief and unbelief (Beaudoin (2005), 47-48)
[9]
In fact it is a point that had
been clearly spelt out even before Weilenberg (2010). See Beaudoin (2005) who presents an analogy similar
to my own Sally example:
Return again to the case of Smith. Smith
testifies to me that P, and now I accept P on the basis of Smith's testimony;
unlike in the previous case, I don't have the testimony of my own eyes to the
truth of what Smith told me, or any other independent grounds for accepting P.
If I now come to believe that, for all I know, Smith is a liar, or at least
that in these matters he lies as often as he tells the truth, then I have an
undermining defeater for my belief
that P. Allegedly, skeptical theists are in roughly the same position in
respect to their beliefs about God's plans, such as their belief that some
souls will be saved: God, for all we know, has some good but inscrutable reason
for deceiving us in such matters, and we have nothing to go on here but God's
own word. Clearly the upshot [of the objection] is that it would be irrational
for skeptical theists to hold the target beliefs about God's eschatological
plans on the basis of his
revelation. (Beaudoin (2005), 46, my italics)
[10]
Though see note 7 on how
premise (2d) of the LIES+ argument would most obviously be justified and on how
the argument should consequently be understood.
[11]
I here pass over what at least appears to be a glaring inconsistency in
McBrayer and Swenson’s paper. According to McBrayer and Swenson:
What a sceptical theist is committed to…is a general scepticism about our
knowledge of what God would do in any particular situation. We don’t think that
atheists or theists can say with any serious degree of confidence why God does
what he does or why he would or wouldn’t do a certain thing. (McBrayer and
Swenson (2012),145).
But if we cannot say
with any serious degree of confidence that God would do a certain thing, how
are McBrayer and Swenson able to assert (G)?
Comments
"‘Axp’ = a is a divine assertion that p"
An "a" should be an "x" or vice versa.
"Thus, if the sceptical theist accepts the conclusion of the noseeum inference, then they should also accept LIES"
A bit confusing: a sceptical theist doesn't accept the conclusion of the noseeum inference, though perhaps you meant the inference described in the previous sentence, which is an anti-noseeum.
1. x is morally perfect
2. x told a lie
I take this to follow from the concept of lying properly understood, i.e. that it is never the case that lying is morally permissible. Of course more argument is needed, but let us say that a fellow, Bob, is a skeptical theist with respect to the Evidential P.O.E. and also a Kantian (or maybe he's an Aristotelian on other days) when it comes to morality. Bob would not allow that God might ever have reason to lie. Bob would say that the probability of God lying was a cold, hard zero.
This isn't entirely uninformative for the skeptical theist, though. If they like the skeptical resolution to the POE and they want to ward of wielenberg with the moral perfection defense then (I think it might successfully be argued that) they should probably not be a divine command theorist.
Isn't the step before sceptical theism assuming some sort of consequentialism, though? That is, the sorts of things which count as reasons for evils (and make them non-gratuitous) are countervailing goods. The idea that there could be such goods is essential to sceptical theism but if one has a morality which says "one must never do/allow evil X", one is saying that X is always gratuitous.
It seems one's opponent could then look for examples of where God does or allows X and show that God is not good (or that a Good God doesn't exist, if you like). I guess it's hard to show that God has lied. Would Kant say one should inform on liars (something which God doesn't do?) I'm not an expert on Kant: what else could we find there?
Perhaps there are only some X's in our morality and we're prepared to weigh some evils (apart from those) against goods. What distinguishes these two types of evil? Why can't we say "a virtuous man would never pass by on the other side of suffering", say (something which it certainly seems God does)?
You believe the colour red exists and is real...and forms a basis of true knowledge...In fact, most probably a cornerstone (philosophers always make a big deal about colour perception).
Now, if was I was sitting on the grass in a garden with you...and said...Look at the lovely red grass...you would correct me and say..."What! No, the colour of the grass is green you idiot!"
And yet...in reality "colours" don't exist in the world, i.e. they are not real...
So there is no common sense or scientific-justifying reason to believe in colours...and yet in your every day world you do believe in something that doesn't exist...
Why?
Isn't the concept of "Evil" similar...and if it isn't...why isn't it?
I don't think that the prior step is consequentialism at all. The skeptical theist does not need to believe that it is the state of affairs that grounds the "morally acceptable reason" for God allowing the suffering. They could appeal to another principle.. for instance, that it is wrong to take morphine for fun, but it is acceptable to administer it to someone with appendicitis. The point is not that the morphine is ok in the second scenario because there are two possible worlds, one with more pain and the other with less, but that the character of the individual taking the morphine for fun is deficient in some way (subject to his appetite for physical pleasure) whereas the doctor administering the morphine and the patient receiving it both have the eventual flourishing of the patient in mind in the same act (the administration of morphine). This is to say that the use of the morphine in the first case tells us something about the moral character of the man, whereas it tells us really nothing about the moral character of the doctor and the patient. So, the skeptical theist doesn't need to say something like, "oh, you think this world is bad, you should see the others", rather, they could say that the mere existence of suffering, even a lot, does not suffice to impugn God's character.
From this line of thinking, we can then ask if it is ever ok to permit or cause suffering, and then we will of course need to have a good definition of suffering. Now, we can go further to ask whether or not this commits us to the notion that divine revelation could be full of lies, or that God could have morally permissible reasons for lying. Unfortunately for Law (I believe at this point anyway), God could only have such reasons on consequentialist grounds (or perhaps some variation of duty ethics that gives an account of lying involving things like a 'right to truth'). So, the skeptical theist who advances his argument against the evidential POE from non-consequentialist grounds (the sort of argument sketched crudely above) is, I say, immune.
Thanks