If Plantinga's argument is considered to be a refutation of the problem of evil, then criticizing that argument is
defending the problem of evil.
Then your comment that it is trivial is clearly mistaken.
The problem is, according to libertarian free will, such actions are as freely willed as any other. Don't you see a problem with a theory of free will that renders your knee jerking when struck by at doctors office, and choosing what tie to wear, equally
freely willed?
Libertarian free will
does not entail that every action is willed. The libertarian is only committed to the supposition that
at least some actions are freely willed, not that they are
all freely willed. What makes you say that of libertarian free will? That is, what have you been reading that makes you think that the libertarian is committed to the supposition that
all actions are freely willed? No defender of free will that I know of defends such absurd a supposition.
No, physical possibility. Its unclear what exactly is intrinsically valuable about having both the capacity to inflict harm, as well as the ability to freely will it, above and beyond the value of merely being able to will it (and choosing not to)- and more generally, it is not clear what is valuable, in itself, about libertarian free will in the first place, construed along the lines already mentioned.
Well, think of what such a world would be like: it might be a world in which no physical beings exist. Or a world in which every time someone tried to inflict harm on someone else, a sort of protective bubble might form whenever someone attempted to cause harm. But God has quite plausible good reasons for allowing individuals to inflict bodily harm upon one another. In any case, we aren't in an epistemic position to know. Now, you mention that it's not clear what is valuable about libertarian free will in the first place. The answer seems quite forthcoming to me: any possible world that has libertarian free will is greater than every world in which there isn't free will for in the absence of free will, there is no such thing as "good" in such a world. All it would take for a world with free will to be greater than a world without free will would be the doing of just one good action.
That's not relevant, unless it is the case that it was logically impossible to have both; as I mentioned, there is no apparent contradiction between allowing free will (if it can be shown to be a good in itself at all), and nevertheless having created a world in which agents causing harm or suffering to one other is not physically feasible.
But such a world might not be feasible or at the very least would be, on the whole, less perfect a world than this one in which, though there is suffering and harm, there are nevertheless incommensurable goods that result form them. For, after all, it is better an act to refrain from hurting someone when you physically can harm them than freely refraining from harming someone when you cannot physically harm them in the first place.
:sarcastic
Let's focus on one piece of Plantinga at a time- discussions of his epistemology probably should be dealt with elsewhere; and in any case, I don't see why our belief that our actions are freely willed, in the relevant sense, is epistemically foundational in the sense that, e.g. belief in an external world is.
It might be even more foundational than the belief in the external world, for, after all, one must first make use of his capacities to freely reason
that there is an external world in the first place.
You honestly don't see any problem with that portrayal of determinism?
Do you?
Even if that were true, it would not be relevant to whether moral nihilism is true.
Right, but the very fact that one cannot live consistently without living
as if some actions were truly wrong or truly right lends great support to the supposition that there really are such things as good and bad.
No, that doesn't follow. Moral anti-realism/nihilism does not entail anarchy. I mean, isn't it obvious that there are at least practical reasons for enforcing moral and societal norms?
Sure, again the nihilist could live
as if some actions were truly wrong or right, or he could simply construct a fictitious moral "code" in the interest of his own self-preservation, but moral nihilism, let alone determinism,
does entail the doing away with
any concepts of moral responsibility out the window.
Convincing? I mean, they are valid, but then so is-
If atheism is true, God does not exist.
God exists.
Atheism is not true.
Convincing? Um, not exactly.
Well, just ask yourself: are some actions truly right or wrong? It just seems obvious that they are. Are some actions freely willed? Again, it seems obvious that at least some are. For example, I am currently freely writing this response to you. If I wanted to, I could stop writing it at any moment. Or I could delete it and never post it, etc. Any premise that seeks to demonstrate that we do not ever freely will any action is less obvious than the fact that we do freely will some actions. Ditto with morality.