Jeffery Jay Lowder, in Defense of The Evidential Argument For A Reply To William Lane Craig
Jeffery Jay Lowder, in Defense of The Evidential Argument For A Reply To William Lane Craig
Abstract
On his Reasonable Faith website, William Lane Craig published a popular article about
general arguments from evil against the existence of an all-powerful, all-knowing, and
perfectly good God. Although the article was not specifically aimed at philosopher Paul
Draper's famous evidential argument from evil based on facts about the biological role
of pain and pleasure, it is consistent with the objections Craig raised against that
argument in an oral debate with Draper on God's existence in 1998. In this article I
review the points Craig raises in order to evaluate whether they have any force in
rebutting Draper's writings on his pain and pleasure version of the evidential argument
from evil. I conclude that Craig's points do not in fact have any force whatever against
Draper's robust abductive argument from evil.
Keywords: Evidential argument from evil; pain and pleasure; Paul Draper; theism;
naturalism; William Lane Craig.
Word Count: 6,570
2
On his Reasonable Faith website, William Lane Craig (n.d.) published a popular article
about general arguments from evil against the existence of an all-powerful, all-knowing,
and perfectly good God. Although the article was not specifically aimed at philosopher
Paul Draper's (1996a) famous evidential argument from evil based on facts about the
biological role of pain and pleasure, it is consistent with the objections Craig raised
against that argument in an oral debate with Draper on God's existence in 1998 (Lowder
1998). In this article I review the points Craig raises in order to evaluate whether they
have any force in rebutting Draper's writings on his pain and pleasure version of the
evidential argument from evil. I conclude that Craig's points do not in fact have any
The first section provides several examples of what Draper means by "pain and
pleasure." The second section reviews the argument's logical structure. Section three
critically assesses Craig's response to the argument's premises. Finally, the fourth
section critically assesses Craig's objection to the inference made in the argument's
conclusion.
Because Craig's essay is written for a popular audience, it occasionally blurs distinctions
that he might not have made if he were writing for a more academic audience. For
example, he refers to 'the probabilistic problem of evil' (italics mine) even though Craig
knows that there are many different kinds of probabilistic (or evidential) arguments
from evil. Even if he successfully identifies a flaw in one version of the evidential
argument from evil, it doesn't follow that said flaw will apply to all versions of the
argument. Each of these arguments are logically independent in the sense that each
argument succeeds or fails independently of the others, and the different arguments
Similarly, there is no 'the' evidential argument from evil but instead a family of
independent arguments, such as pain and pleasure, flourishing and languishing (Draper
2012; Draper 2013, p. 72), virtue and vice (Draper 2013, p. 72; Draper 2015, pp. 29-34),
triumph and tragedy (Draper 2013, p. 72), autonomy and heteronomy (Draper 2015, pp.
18-19, 26-29), divine silence in the face of tragedies (Rowe 1996, Drange 1998, pp. 208-
211, 223-224), social evil (Poston n.d.), and the failure of theodicies (Rowe 1996a). Each
of these arguments are logically independent in the sense that each argument succeeds
or fails independently of the others, and the different arguments could be combined
I will say no more about these other evidential arguments from evil and instead
will devote the rest of this article to Draper's (1996a) evidential argument from pain and
pleasure. So let's begin by reviewing what Draper means by "pain and pleasure." As I
read him, Draper means three facts which he calls O1, O2, and O3. These three facts are
1.1 Observation 1: Moral Agents Experiencing Biologically Useful Pain and Pleasure
Suppose you are a teenager sleeping in a hotel that has caught on fire. The hotel is old
and doesn't have any smoke alarms. The fire gets closer and closer to you until you are
actually in pain from the smoke and the intense heat. Your pain wakes you up in time to
escape, so you go on to survive and start a family in your twenties. In this case your pain
was biologically useful because it contributed to the biological "goal" of survival. The
naturalistic explanation for the unfolding of this scenario is obvious. If human beings are
the products of evolution by natural selection, we would expect physical pain and
pleasure to motivate human behavior in ways that aid survival and reproduction.
1.2 Observation 2: Sentient Beings Experiencing Biologically Useful Pain and Pleasure
Most human beings are what philosophers call moral agents, people who can be held
responsible for their actions and the consequences of their actions. But some human
beings (such as young children and humans with certain mental disabilities), as well as
nonhuman sentient animals (such as primates and dolphins), are moral patients—
sentient beings who can be harmed from their own point of view, but are not
patients and moral agents to experience biologically useful pain and pleasure. For
biological moral patients (such as nonhuman primates and dolphins) are biologically
would predict that biological moral patients do not suffer the same kind of pain as
biological moral agents. Such pain plays no known moral role in the lives of the
biological moral patients who experience it. For example, such pain isn't necessary for
free will, doesn't seem to influence moral patients to freely choose right actions over
wrong ones, doesn't enable moral patients to acquire moral virtue, and doesn't usually
increase their knowledge of God. Indeed, as if to underscore the point, theists typically
emphasize that concepts like moral freedom, moral obligation, moral virtue, and
salvation do not even apply to nonhuman animals, and thus do not apply to the majority
of moral patients.
One objection to this point goes as follows. If naturalism is true, the existence of
biological sentient beings is surprising, and so it's false to say that naturalism 'predicts'
that biological sentient beings would experience biologically useful pain and pleasure. I
agree that naturalism, by itself, does not predict the existence of biological sentient
beings and so, for that reason, doesn't predict biological sentient beings who would
experience biologically useful pain and pleasure. That is not of obvious relevance to
Draper's argument from pain and pleasure, however, since that argument includes the
proposition, then so be it. But, given the truth of that and other background
propositions, naturalism does make it probable that such beings would experience
B1 is more probable on the assumption that H1 is true than on the assumption that H2
is true
E1 is more probable on the assumption that H1 and B1 are true than on the assumption
H2 and B1 are true.
1.3 Observation 3: Sentient Beings Experiencing Pain and Pleasure Not Known to be
Useful
But not all physical pain and pleasure is biologically useful. For example, consider an
animal trapped in a forest fire that suffers horrific pain as it slowly burns to death (Rowe
1979). On the one hand, this kind of pain is biologically appropriate: it is biologically
useful in general that animals feel pain when they come in contact with fire. But, on the
other hand, this specific instance of pain is not biologically useful because it does not
On naturalism, this is just what we would expect. If naturalism is true, all animals
are the byproducts of unguided evolution by natural selection, which is both indifferent
to suffering and incapable of fine-tuning animals to prevent such pain. Thus, the kind of
pain and pleasure that we actually find is what we would expect if naturalism were true.
But if theism were true, God could "fine tune" animals so that they only
experience physical pain and pleasure when it is morally necessary. So theism leads us
to expect that pain and pleasure are fundamentally moral phenomena that just happen
While my examples above refer to naturalism, Draper (1996a) instead referred to "the
hypothesis of indifference" (HI), which he defines as the proposition that "neither the
nature nor the condition of sentient beings on earth results from benevolent or
malevolent actions performed by supernatural persons." I will say more about that in a
moment.
For the sake of brevity, I will adopt the following notation throughout the remainder of
this essay:
Notation Meaning
Pr(x) the epistemic probability of x
the epistemic probability of x conditional upon y (i.e., the
Pr(x | y) epistemic probability that proposition X is true, on the
assumption that proposition y is true)
Pr(|H|) the intrinsic probability of H
~ not
& and
>! much greater than
observations about pain and pleasure. More formally, Draper defines O as a statement
about "the kinds, amounts, and distribution of pain and pleasure in the world." In
So defined, Draper's (2004, p. 47) argument from the biological role of pain and
1. O is known to be true.
2. Theism (T) is not much more probable intrinsically than the hypothesis of indifference
(HI) [i.e., Pr(|T|) is not much greater than Pr(|HI|)].
3. O is much more likely on the assumption that the hypothesis of indifference is true
than it is on the assumption that theism is true [i.e., Pr(O | HI) >! Pr(O | T)].
4. So, other evidence held equal, theism is probably false.
Let us now return to the distinction between naturalism and HI. While HI is, like
In his popular essay, Craig writes nothing in response to premises (1) or (2).
Instead, all of his objections respond to either premises (3) or (4). Let's turn to those
objections now.
3. Premise (3)
Craig's (n.d., para 11) first objection to probabilistic arguments from evil is that the
1. We are not in a good position to assess the probability of whether God has morally
sufficient reasons for the evils that occur. As finite persons, we are limited in time,
space, intelligence, and insight. But the transcendent and sovereign God sees the end
from the beginning and providentially orders history so that His purposes are ultimately
achieved through human free decisions. In order to achieve His ends, God may have to
put up with certain evils along the way. Evils which appear pointless to us within our
limited framework may be seen to have been justly permitted within God's wider
framework. To borrow an illustration from a developing field of science, Chaos Theory,
scientists have discovered that certain macroscopic systems, for example, weather
systems or insect populations, are extraordinarily sensitive to the tiniest perturbations.
A butterfly fluttering on a branch in West Africa may set in motion forces which would
eventually issue in a hurricane over the Atlantic Ocean. Yet it is impossible in principle
for anyone observing that butterfly palpitating on a branch to predict such an outcome.
The brutal murder of an innocent man or a child's dying of leukemia could produce a
sort of ripple effect through history such that God's morally sufficient reason for
permitting it might not emerge until centuries later and perhaps in another land. When
you think of God's providence over the whole of history, I think you can see how
hopeless it is for limited observers to speculate on the probability that God could have a
morally sufficient reason for permitting a certain evil. We're just not in a good position
to assess such probabilities.
But Draper (1989) refuted this objection in his original essay. 1 To sum up: it's possible
that God has unknown reasons for allowing evil. But it's also possible—and antecedently
just as likely—that God has unknown reasons for preventing evil. So God's preventing
the "brutal murder of an innocent man or a child's dying of leukemia could produce a
sort of ripple effect through history such that God's morally sufficient reason for"
preventing such evils "might not emerge until centuries later and perhaps in another
land." So the possibilities of unknown reasons for allowing evil and unknown reasons for
preventing evil "cancel out." We're right back where we started, namely, working with
what we do know: O. In fact, this is pretty much the point of using epistemic
to Pr(O | T). As far as I know, Craig has never addressed this portion of Draper's (1996a)
pointed out, logically consistent natural theologians cannot appeal to the limitations of
human cognitive abilities to defeat evidential arguments from evil (Draper 1996b, p.
188). Allow me to explain. If human cognitive limitations really did prevent us from
assessing whether God has morally sufficient reasons for allowing evil, including facts
about pain and pleasure, then Craig can kiss goodbye all of his arguments from natural
1
Cf. Lowder 2014b.
theology for God's existence. Consistent skeptical theists should also insist that human
Pr(Resurrection | theism).
This is why logically consistent natural theologians, like Oxford University philosopher
Richard Swinburne, don't rely upon skeptical theism. Instead, they attempt to provide
theodicies—explanations for why God, if He exists, would allow facts about the kinds,
amounts, and distribution of evil in the world to obtain (Draper 2010, p. 18).
Craig's second objection is that Christian doctrines increase the antecedent probability
of evil on theism; that is, they increase the value of Pr(O | T). In his words:
2. The Christian faith entails doctrines that increase the probability of the co-existence of
God and evil. In so doing, these doctrines decrease any improbability of God's existence
thought to issue from the existence of evil. (Craig n.d., para 12)
But Craig's second objection contradicts his first one. If we can determine that
the Christian faith entails doctrines that increase the probability of the coexistence of
God and evil, then it follows that we are in a good position to assess whether God has
morally sufficient reasons for the evils that occur. But let's put that to the side. Has Craig
shown that Christian doctrines increase the antecedent probability of evil on theism?
(5) Evil is antecedently more probable given Christian theism (CT) than it is given HI, i.e.,
Pr(evil | CT) > Pr(evil | HI).
But Draper's argument is not about all types of evil; rather, it concerns known facts
about a specific subset of evils (and goods): pain and pleasure. So let's revise (5) to
become:
(5') Facts about pain and pleasure are antecedently more probable given Christian
theism (CT) than they are given HI, i.e., Pr(O | CT) > Pr(O | HI).
Even if (5') were true, however, it would be irrelevant. Why? Because it wouldn't follow
that:
(6) O is antecedently more probable given T than it is given HI, i.e., Pr(O | T) > Pr(O | HI).
from evil compares HI to theism simpliciter, not to theism conjoined with Christian
given HI, not whether theism, with the assistance of several auxiliary hypotheses, can
explain O as well as HI. 2 Notice also that Christian theism is not known to be true. So
again, one must wonder: what relevance could Christian doctrines possibly have to
Again, paraphrasing Draper, the only conceivable way that Christian theism
could be relevant would be if it showed that the third premise of the argument is false—
that O is not antecedently much more probable on HI than on T (Draper 2004a). But
how could it do this? Since we don't know that Christianity is true, we cannot simply
equate Pr(O | T) with Pr(O | T & CT). Rather, in order to assess CT's effect on Pr(O | T),
we must use what Draper (1996a, p. 20) calls the weighted average principle (WAP),
average, however, since those two values may not equal 1/2. The second half of the
right-hand side of that equation, Pr(~CT | T) × Pr(O | T & ~CT), is not going to be useful
for deriving a high value for Pr(O | T). Otherwise, there would be no need to introduce
2
Cf. Draper's parallel response to the multiverse objection to an evidential argument from moral agency
in Draper 2004a.
argument from the biological role of pain and pleasure, then, Pr(CT | T) x Pr(O | T & CT)
particular is antecedently very unlikely on theism in general for three reasons. First, CT is
a very specific hypothesis, and so will be very improbable in the absence of evidence for
it regardless of how little evidence there is against it (Draper 1996a, pp. 24-25). 3 The
specificity of CT means that it makes many more assumptions than T alone, so there are
many more places where CT can get the facts wrong. The more assumptions that a
Second, we have very little "independent" evidence for the truth of CT. At best, it
is weakly supported by the historicity of Jesus and by several events relating to his life,
death, and alleged resurrection, such as his crucifixion, burial, and empty tomb, as well
that "God raised Jesus from the dead" (R) and Christian scholars, including Craig (1989),
argue that R is the best explanation for those events. But R remains highly speculative.
3
Cf. Lowder 2014b.
Contrary to what Craig and other defenders of R assert, R does not imply the events of
Third, the assumption that theism is true gives us very little reason to expect that
R is true. Thus, apart from independent evidence for CT, a very specific hypothesis like
CT is very unlikely on theism, and hence Pr(O | T) is very close to Pr(O | T & ~CT). In
short, CT gives us no reason at all to think that the third premise of Draper's evidential
theism, i.e., auxiliary assumptions which entail theism. This notation enables us to put
Let us now turn to Craig's specific points about Christian doctrines, which
function as theodicies. Since Draper used T1, T2, and T3 in his 1989 article to refer to
4
By itself, R tells us nothing about whether there was an empty tomb, for R is compatible with a wide
variety of auxiliary hypotheses concerning the status of Jesus' corpse between the time of his death and
the time of his alleged resurrection. For all we know antecedently—that is, prior to considering the
specific evidence—Jesus could have been denied burial and could have risen from the cross, not the
grave. Or perhaps individuals who were resurrected in a tomb might decide to stay in the tomb, eternally
marveling at their own resurrection body. In order to guarantee an empty tomb, the resurrection
hypothesis must be combined with at least one other hypothesis, such as the honorable burial hypothesis.
In other words, given only the truth of the resurrection hypothesis, the probability of an empty tomb is
less than 100%. See Cavin 2005.
specific theodicies, in what follows I will pick up where Draper left off and number
First, Craig (n.d., para 13) offers the following explanation for human suffering:
a. The chief purpose of life is not happiness, but the knowledge of God. One reason that
the problem of evil seems so puzzling is that we tend to think that if God exists, then His
goal for human life is happiness in this world. God's role is to provide comfortable
environment for His human pets. But on the Christian view this is false. We are not
God's pets, and man's end is not happiness in this world, but the knowledge of God,
which will ultimately bring true and everlasting human fulfillment. Many evils occur in
life which maybe utterly pointless with respect to the goal of producing human
happiness in this world, but they may not be unjustified with respect to producing the
knowledge of God. Innocent human suffering provides an occasion for deeper
dependency and trust in God, either on the part of the sufferer or those around him. Of
course, whether God's purpose is achieved through our suffering will depend on our
response. Do we respond with anger and bitterness toward God, or do we turn to Him
in faith for strength to endure?
T4: God exists, and one of His final ends is human knowledge of God.
It seems to me that this theodicy suffers from essentially the same problems as
theodicy T1 in Draper's original 1989 article, however. To see why, I will charitably
assume for the sake of argument that Pr(T4 | T) is high. Nevertheless, Pr(O | T4) is still
not significantly greater than Pr(O | T & ~T4). 5 Craig is surely correct that when humans
and trust in God." So T4 does provide some reason to expect O (and, specifically, O1).
But O also reports biological pain experienced by sentient beings that are not moral
deeper dependency and trust in God. This is much more surprising on T4 than on theism
& ~T4.
problem of evil by itself, as well as divine silence during suffering (Rowe 1996b, p. 276),
causes many people to doubt or deny God's existence. But the belief that God exists is a
prerequisite for trust in God. So, channeling Draper (1996a, p. 22), we may conclude
and for this reason Pr(O | T4) is not significantly greater than Pr(O | T & ~T4).
Craig (n.d., para 14) next explains human suffering along these lines:
b. Mankind is in a state of rebellion against God and His purpose. Rather than submit to
and worship God, people rebel against God and go their own way and so find
themselves alienated from God, morally guilty before Him, and groping in spiritual
darkness, pursuing false gods of their own making. The terrible human evils in the world
5
In fact, it seems to me that Pr(O | T4) is actually less than Pr(O | T & ~T4), but the success of Draper's
argument doesn't depend upon that claim.
are testimony to man's depravity in this state of spiritual alienation from God. The
Christian is not surprised at the human evil in the world; on the contrary, he expects it.
The Bible says that God has given mankind over to the sin it has chosen; He does not
interfere to stop it, but lets human depravity run its course. This only serves to heighten
mankind's moral responsibility before God, as well as our wickedness and our need of
forgiveness and moral cleansing.
T5: God exists, and mankind is in a state of rebellion against God and His purpose.
themselves. First, Pr(T5 | T) is not high. While the content of T (arguably) provides some
reason to expect the existence of nondivine persons, and so to that extent does provide
some reason to expect the existence of mankind,6 it provides no reason at all to expect
mankind in a state of rebellion against God and His purpose. In fact, the situation is even
worse than that. Based solely on the content of T, the existence of nondivine persons in
rebellion against God is very surprising. T entails that if nondivine persons exist, then
they were created by a morally perfect being. Everything else held equal, the
proposition that "Nondivine persons were created by a morally perfect being" provides
strong reason to expect that nondivine persons would not be in rebellion against God.
So Pr(T5 | T) is low, i.e., Pr(T5 | T) << 1/2. 7 In accordance with the WAP, it follows that
Pr(O | T) will be much closer to Pr(O | T & ~T5) (Draper 1996a, p. 20). (Remember, at
6
I owe this point to Paul Draper.
7
I owe this point to Paul Draper.
this point we are assessing Pr(T5 | T), the antecedent probability of T5 on T, not Pr(T5 |
CT), the antecedent probability of T5 on CT. So Christian doctrines about the rebellion of
Second, Pr(O | T5) is not significantly greater than Pr(O | T & ~T5). This can be
seen by considering O1, O2, and O3 individually. Regarding O1, T5 is irrelevant to the
vast majority of human pain and pleasure reported in O1. Turning to O2, T5 is by
definition irrelevant to the pain and pleasure experienced by moral patients reported in
O2. This leaves O3. O3 includes biologically gratuitous human pain and pleasure. T5 is
arguably relevant to that portion of O3.8 But while it is relevant, T5 does not provide a
strong reason to expect biologically gratuitous human pain and pleasure, i.e.,
Pr("biologically gratuitous human pain and pleasure" | T5) is not > 1/2. Furthermore, T5
also seems irrelevant to biologically gratuitous pain and pleasure experienced by moral
patients who are not also moral agents; at the very least, T5 provides no reason to think
such pain and pleasure is more probable than not. For all of these reasons, then, T5 fails
8
As Paul Draper has pointed out in private correspondence, T5 is not completely irrelevant to O because
O3 includes biologically gratuitous human pain.
Third, Craig (n.d., para 15) offers yet another explanation for human suffering, to wit:
c. The knowledge of God spills over into eternal life. In the Christian view, this life is not
all there is. Jesus promised eternal life to all who place their trust in him as their Savior
and Lord. In the afterlife God will reward those who have borne their suffering in
courage and trust with an eternal life of unspeakable joy. The apostle Paul, who wrote
much of the New Testament, lived a life of incredible suffering. Yet he wrote, "We do
not lose heart. For this slight, momentary affliction is preparing us for an eternal weight
of glory beyond all comparison, because we look not to the things that are seen, but to
the things that are unseen, for the things that are seen are transient, but the things that
are unseen are eternal" (II Cor. 4:16-18). Paul imagines a scale, as it were, in which all
the sufferings of this life are placed on one side, while on the other side is placed the
glory that God will bestow on his children in heaven. The weight of glory is so great that
it is literally beyond comparison with the suffering. Moreover, the longer we spend in
eternity the more the sufferings of this life shrink toward an infinitesimal moment.
That's why Paul could call them "a slight and momentary affliction"—they were simply
overwhelmed by the ocean of divine eternity and joy which God lavishes on those who
trust Him.
T6: God exists, and will reward believers in the afterlife with glorious pleasure that will
outweigh any horrific suffering they experienced in this life.
T6 fails for two reasons. First, it's far from obvious that Pr(T6 | T) is high. In
addition to the dubious assumption that theism 'predicts' a physical universe designed
for the evolution of embodied moral agents in the form of human beings, 9 T6 also
9
To avoid any misunderstandings, I again want to clarify the point made above. The content of theism
(arguably) does provide some reason for expecting the existence of nondivine persons, and so to that
extent provides some reason for expecting the existence of mankind, i.e., Pr(mankind | theism) > 0. But
the content of theism does not provide reason to expect that the existence of mankind is more probable
than not; in other words, there is no good reason to think Pr(mankind | theism) > 1/2.
(a) that God, having created embodied moral agents, intends for them to have an
existence whatsoever);
(b) that the only or primary factor God uses to decide one's fate in the afterlife is one's
religious beliefs during this life (rather than using one's behavior as the only or primary
factor);
(c) that compensating believers in the afterlife somehow morally justifies God in
allowing the types, quantity, and distribution of evil we find in the world; and
(d) that God is somehow morally justified in not compensating nonbelievers who have
For all of these reasons, it's far from obvious that Pr(T6 | T) is high.
Second, Pr(O | T6) is not significantly greater than Pr(O | T & ~T6). In fact, it
appears that these two values are either equal or very close to equal, which again
implies that T6 is irrelevant. As was the case with T5, T6 is irrelevant to the vast majority
Furthermore, T6 is, by definition, irrelevant to the vast majority of pain and pleasure
Finally, Craig's (n.d., para 16) last explanation for human suffering runs as follows:
There is no doubt that, if God exists, the knowledge of God is an enormous good.
But to go from there to the claim that "The sufferings of this life cannot even be
compared to it" is a surprisingly tone deaf comment to make for someone like Craig.
Indeed, one is tempted to retort, "Try telling that to the Holocaust survivors who lost
their faith in God as a result of their experience," and to dismiss this entire point with
the contemptuous sneer it deserves. But to do so would be a mistake, for that would fail
to point out that there is no good reason to think that knowledge of God requires
anyone to suffer pain, 10 and therefore the knowledge of God does not in any way
10
I owe this point to Paul Draper.
increase Pr(O | T) because Pr(O | T7) is not significantly greater than Pr(O | T & ~T7). So
In summary, then, none of Craig's four Christian doctrines increase Pr(O | T).
Accordingly, the central claim of Draper's evidential argument from evil—that facts
about the biological role (and apparent moral randomness) of pain and pleasure are
4. Conclusion (4)
Craig's (n.d., paras 18-19) final strategy is to argue that the total evidence makes theism
3. Relative to the full scope of the evidence, God's existence is probable. Probabilities are
relative to what background information you consider. For example, suppose Joe is a
student at the University of Colorado. Now suppose that we are informed that 95% of
University of Colorado students ski. Relative to this information it is highly probable that
Joe skis. But then suppose we also learn that Joe is an amputee and that 95% of
amputees at the University of Colorado do not ski. Suddenly the probability of Joe's
being a skier has diminished drastically!
Similarly, if all you consider for background information is the evil in the world, then it's
hardly surprising that God's existence appears improbable relative to that. But that's not
the real question. The real question is whether God's existence is improbable relative to
the total evidence available. I'm persuaded that when you consider the total evidence,
then God's existence is quite probable.
Craig then proceeds to summarize his purported evidence for God's existence.
Craig's Joe example is a perfect example for illustrating why Draper's argument
succeeds, whereas Craig's theistic arguments do not. In the Joe example we are asked to
As Craig correctly points out, that statistical syllogism is logically incorrect because it
violates the rule of total evidence. We know more about Joe than the fact that he is a
(Lowder 2014a). Nevertheless, the rule of total evidence is satisfied because the
conclusion of Draper's argument is that "All other evidence held equal, theism is
paribus clause, and so are vulnerable to a parallel objection. Putting aside the fact Craig
imagine if we were to paraphrase Craig's own words against him as part of a reply to his
Similarly, if all you consider for background information is the beginning of the universe,
then it's hardly surprising that God's existence appears probable relative to that. But
that's not the real question. The real question is whether God's existence is probable
relative to the total evidence available. I'm persuaded that when you consider the total
evidence, then God's existence is quite improbable.
11
Craig's words suggest that evidential arguments from evil treat some fact about evil as "background
information" when in fact they do the opposite—they treat some fact about evil as evidence (odd or
puzzling facts to be explained). What actually constitutes the relevant background information for
Draper's arguments is summarized in the following five propositions:
B1: Pain and pleasure, if they exist, have intrinsic moral value.
B2: A physical universe—which operates according to natural laws, is intelligible, and which supports the
possibility of intelligent life—exists.
B3: Living things, including sentient beings, exist on Earth. These sentient beings include, but are not
limited to, human beings.
B4: Some (Earthly) sentient beings are not moral agents, but are biologically very similar to embodied
moral agents.
B5: Humans are goal-directed organic systems, composed of parts that systematically contribute to the
biological goals of these systems.
12
At this point, Craig might object that the kalam cosmological argument is deductive, not inductive. But,
at the end of the day, this turns out to be irrelevant since at least one of the premises is not known with
certainty to be true. In fact, I think neither premise is known with certainty to be true, i.e., Pr("anything
which begins to exist has a cause") < 1 and Pr("the universe began to exist") < 1. Therefore, the kalam's
conclusion, "Therefore, the universe has a cause," is also uncertain, i.e., Pr("the universe has a cause") < 1.
So, regardless of whether we categorize the kalam cosmological argument as deductive or inductive,
we're still dealing with probabilities.
Furthermore, the probability of the kalam cosmological argument's conclusion is decreased by additional,
relevant evidence. Even if we knew with certainty that the universe began to exist, that evidence would
be offset by the evidence that the universe began to exist with time, not in time. If we include in our
background information the fact that the universe began to exist, the fact that it begin with time is more
probable on naturalism than on theism. But that entails that the kalam cosmological argument commits
the fallacy of understated evidence. It understates the relevant cosmological evidence, analogous to how
Craig's Joe example understates the relevant physiological evidence about Joe.
In fact, Craig does neglect to consider additional evidence which favors naturalism over
theism, including but not limited to the other known facts about evil mentioned in
section 1. So, contrary to what he claims, Craig has not even attempted to assess the
total evidence, much less justified the conclusion that it favors theism over naturalism.13
13
I am grateful to Paul Draper for helpful comments on a previous draft of this essay.
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