VG,
No -your response is incoherent. The simpler answer is of course clearly from experience there are lots of things we don't know or can't explain. Given it's a fact we don't know what we don't know, it is possible there is a bigger picture.
Oh dear. Of course it’s
possible there’s a bigger picture, and of course in all likelihood what we don’t know we don’t know vastly outweighs what we (believe) we do know. So what though? Should we just stay under the duvet and claim no knowledge of anything because we could be wrong, or should we proceed
as if our knowledge beliefs are "true enough" until and unless they’re shown to be wrong?
Your mistake here is to elide the
possibility of a bigger picture in which, say, babies dying of brain cancer is part of an overall net good, into a
probability that that actually is the case. Doesn’t work though – I could turn a “could be” into an “is” about any other area of knowledge at all, and thereby lay waste to anything.
Of course, if there is a bigger picture, what that bigger picture is probably won't be a god of the omnis - as the god of the omnis is probably just a human interpretation and characterisation based on limited human understanding and conceptualisation, but it's a representation of an idea of a bigger picture. You not liking the answer doesn't make it incoherent.
Nice straw man. You were incoherent not because I didn’t “like” your answer, but because you lurched into the notion “of “sufficient good” when the question was about why there’d be any bad if you subscribe to a god of the omnis.
Again - stop misrepresenting me. I actually said it could be an "evil" act but that god can still be considered good. Why are you finding it so hard to comprehend this sentence?
Because it’s just a repetition of the same casuistry. Try to explain why a god of the omnis that gives brain cancer to babies could still be “considered good” without collapsing again into eliding a big picture “could be” into a big picture “is”.
You can dance round this all you like but you’re still stuck with the intellectual bankruptcy of the “god moves in mysterious ways” get out of jail free card.
Let me try to make it clearer for you. The world we live in has lots of suffering. I decide to have children even though I know they will suffer lots of pain and hardships. I even let my children suffer pain and hardship when I have the power to intervene to relieve them of some of their pain and hardship because I think there is a bigger picture. I do lots of good stuff in the meantime. My children resent / hate me for not intervening when I could have. My children may well think that I am "evil" and hey you might think I am "evil". Oh well.
I don't think that makes me "evil". Who decides?
Unless you claim also to be a god of the omnis that’s a false analogy.
Has that made it clearer for you?