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Home > Argument from nonbelief


 

1 Defining the problem

The argument from nonbelief (also, the argument from divine hiddenness) is a recently-developed argument against the existence of God that is garnering interest in the philosophical community (J.L. Schellenberg, Daniel Howard-Snyder, and Theodore Drange are some of the important participants). The argument mirrors the classic argument from evil but appeals to different troubling facts.

A formal presentation follows:

Assume an omnibenvolent, omnipotent God exists.

  1. God wants all humans to believe in, know and love him. (Omnibenvolent)
  2. God can do anything. (Omnipotent)
  3. God can make all humans love him. (By 2)
  4. Atheists (humans) do not believe in God.
  5. If God wanted something it would be done. (By 2)
  6. If God wanted all humans to believe in him they would. (By 5)
  7. God does not want humans to believe in him. (By 4 & 6)
  8. Contradiction, 1 & 7

Conclusion: An omnibenvolent, omnipotent God does not exist.

Its motivating thought is that if God existed, surely he could have done more to help people believe in him. The fact that so many people doubt God's existence then becomes a very big problem for anyone proclaiming a God who wants humanity to know of him. Theistic evidence is mixed and scattershot and religious experience seems to miss the people who need it most. Since this is not what we'd expect of a super-competent deity, belief in the existence of God with such qualities must wane.

2 Summary of proposed resolutions



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