Heaven's sake, Mad Fool. 'The fall of man' is a mythical account of the predicament of the human condition. Dismissing it with a single paragraph hardly does justice to the magnitude of the existential plight that it tries to address. Your consistent stream of one-liners on these topics reminds me awfully of this. — Wayfarer
You'd be wrong.The way I parse that is God wants us to be innocent more than he wants us to understand Him. — TheMadFool
Nevertheless, even if it's mythical, the message seems to be knowledge of ethics is forbidden and actually the cause of all our problems. The way I parse that is God wants us to be innocent more than he wants us to understand Him. — TheMadFool
According to the Book, Adam and Eve were punished with mortality and other ugly stuff after they ate the fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil. — TheMadFool
Why was Adam and Eve punished for actually failing to understand good and evil? — TheMadFool
There is good argument that the "good and evil" reference is a literary device intended to mean knowledge of everything, not just of morality (the juxtaposition of opposites to make that point). See also Genesis 3:22. Compare 2 Sam 14:17 to 2 Sam 14:20. — Hanover
You'd be wrong.
The ingestion of the fruit is the severing of the divine symbiosis. — Shamshir
The punishment was mortality, which is telling, because the world and life are assumed to be wicked enough to serve as punishments. — NOS4A2
we are barred from perfect wisdom here — 3017amen
Read the story again in the original Hebrew and then the Ugaritic texts.
A whole tribunal elects to forge man, yet only one holds the secret 'breath of life'.
This creation method is what separates man from a mere puppet; hence the free will and divine symbiosis, as they are replicas.
The fruit then was a Trojan Horse to sever this link, illustrated through the escort out of the garden. Ultimately the new malformed man endangers the earth and so a flood is cast. — Shamshir
Unfortunately no one person can answer the question as to why we are barred from perfect wisdom here. (I wish I could!) — 3017amen
According to the Book, Adam and Eve were punished with mortality and other ugly stuff after they ate the fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
This is an unjustified punishment because, if we look at all the squabbling going on in the ethics section of philosophy, we haven't figured out anything in ethics. Of course one may prefer one moral theory over another but there isn't a sound basis for it and that's why there's always the other theory one has to worry about.
Why was Adam and Eve punished for actually failing to understand good and evil?
Poor judgment. — TheMadFool
And that's why you don't take candy from strangers.But you can’t give that kind of capacity to a couple of two-year olds and expect them to learn any kind of humility, let alone teach them to make right judgements when any judgement is just as effective in the short term. — Possibility
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