Hi Gabriella,
Thank you for that expression of your personal faith. It doesn’t detract though from the fact that, as the myth is set up, “God’s warning” would have been meaningless to people who “only knew good” because the only outcomes they could have envisaged were therefore good ones.
It's not a fact with evidence to support it - it's your assertion or POV.
No, it’s a fact – or, if you prefer, it’s the irrefutable logic of the story.
I get that you think you would not be willing to obey an instruction without knowing the possible consequences of not obeying it. I also get that you think this to be a good thing and that you think everyone thinks the same way you do.
That’s not what I think. What I
do think is that, if you posit a couple who “knew only good” there are no possible consequences except for good ones.
However, that this is your personal preference/ morality does not make it the default choice for everyone else on every occasion that they are presented with a choice of obeying or disobeying. Obeying an instruction without knowing the ins and outs of why or the consequences is an example of faith.
But in the myth, obeying, not obeying, whistling Dixie while riding a unicycle,
any response at all would have been a good one if good was "all they knew".
By the way, it happens in the army - even basic training at OTC level involved getting us used to the idea of operating as a team rather than an individual, and that you and your team's lives may depend on a certain amount of faith and willingness to obey orders without question, without knowing the consequences. This can of course lead to misuse of power. Faith, morality, concepts of good and evil are complex issues and I think individual stories/ parables are not designed to cover all the complexities but just illustrate one particular aspect.
Yes, but whether or not you know all the consequences you do at least have a concept that some of them could be bad – ie, “bad” is a meaningful term. Not so though for our heroes in the myth – anything at all they did would - to them – have had good consequences because “good” was all they could conceptualise.
That's why is was a rigged game - if you want to claim the premise of "knew only good", they had no opportunity to make a meaningful choice.