“…For other helpful overviews of this literature, seeBergmann (2009),McBrayer (2010), andPerrine and Wykstra (2017).2 "These additional principles are that good is opposed to evil, in such a way that a good thing always eliminates evil as far as it can, and that there are no limits to what an omnipotent thing can do"(Mackie, 1955, p. 201).3 SeePlantinga (1974) for a thorough treatment of Mackie's argument. For recent discussion of Plantinga's reply, seeOtte (2009),Pruss (2012),Speak (2015),Wielenberg (2016), andOliveira (2022).4 Rowe does not use the notion of a "justifying reason" in his own statement of the argument. That he has this notion in mind, however, is clear from his claims in the preceding paragraph: "Intense human or animal suffering is in itself bad, an evil, even though it may sometimes be justified by virtue of being a part of, or leading to, some good which is unobtainable without it… In such a case, while remaining an evil in itself, the intense human or animal suffering is, nevertheless, an evil which someone might be morally justified in permitting.…”