Premises which I don't necessarily disagree with, but I find unsupported:
"Suffering isn't required for growth."
"Suffering does spur growth, but it's all growth that's only to respond to suffering: such growth is unnecessary in the lack of suffering."
Ok, I can understand why. What if I amended it to "As far as I can see..." to the front of each, and then ask if anyone can think of counterexamples.
Clearly, our own & the suffering of others affects us. Perhaps these effects serve some godly purpose, over & above things like motivating us to alleviate suffering, pursue justice, etc.
But these "good" things are only good to alleviate or prevent suffering; and become extraneous in the absence of the capacity for suffering. For instance, I could release a snake into a nursery to allow someone to be a hero: but am I benevolent to do so?
I like to use examples like "Right now, there's not a dragon in your house -- and right now, you're not experiencing a hero showing up to slay it." Is our day somehow diminished because we didn't get to witness a hero? The existence of justice, heroes, compassion, and so on relies on the existence of suffering -- that is true. Thus if suffering didn't exist then these things wouldn't exist. But is that in itself a bad thing?
Let's use an imaginary nursery right now where suffering doesn't normally occur. Is something wrong with this nursery
until someone releases a snake in it for someone to step up and be a hero? I certainly don't see why this would be the case. This is why I don't understand the "But without suffering, X virtue wouldn't exist" objection. I don't think the objection fully thinks everything through.
A game with no compelling consequences would not be the same as real life experiences.
Sure, but would you rather wake up, drink your coffee, read the paper/watch TV and then hang out with some friends... or would you like to wake up, slay the goblin under the bed, dodge the booby traps in the hallway, bring medicine to your sick housemate all while you're coming down with a nasty cough yourself?
Is suffering
really required to have a fulfilling life? I certainly don't think so. Or at the very least, not the
extent of suffering we have in this world. Do you object to the argument that it's cognitively logical that suffering doesn't have to be as
prevalent or as
severe as it is in this world?
Even if simply reduced suffering is logically possible, the PoE has full force because God still wouldn't be benevolent if He didn't
minimize suffering.
But the faithful would say that we don't cease to exist. Perhaps the benefits of suffering accrue in the next life.
Which is special pleading, and furthermore still raises questions about benevolence: do the ends justify the means, and why couldn't God -- an omnipotent being -- simply provided whatever benefits there are without the suffering? Unless there is an argument that pins down exactly how suffering causes a greater good that couldn't be accomplished without suffering, it's all special pleading and therefore does nothing to stop the force of the PoE.
I've re-read the definitions of "special pleading", just to be sure I'm responding properly, but I just don't see how it's applicable. Your unsupported premises still don't defeat the possibilities I've noted, so the PoE doesn't appear to be a problem with all powerful supreme beings in general.
I should note here, that I'm not siding with evil....despite what some posters will tell you.
My premises gain their force from the fact that they're aimed at people who already accept the premises. If you don't accept the initial premises of the PoE then it simply doesn't apply because there's no contradiction unless all of the premises are in place.
Also, special pleading doesn't stop the force of the PoE. "Suffering could ultimately be good in some unknowable way" is special pleading, and doesn't resolve the PoE. No fallacy is ever an acceptable response to any logical argument.