Abstract
The scientific worldview is often claimed to reveal a universe
chillingly indifferent to human suffering. But it’s unclear
what it means to describe the universe as indifferent,
or what a non- indifferent universe would be like. I suggest
that the relevant contrast isn’t simply that between God and
His absence, nor is the complaint about indifference focused
on the lack of a kind of cosmic concern. At its heart is the
idea of a mismatch between world and value. Although the
causal forces governing our world are ‘blind’, they nevertheless
do partly align with value. Still, our world is so
arranged that senseless suffering is depressingly common,
and the rosy non- indifferent counterfactual won’t contain
such evil. I argue, however, that it is a mistake to long for
such an alternative: it must either involve an upside- down
moral order, or would be a world from which we, and those
who senselessly suffer, will be absent.