How would Adam and Eve have known beforehand they should eat the fruit? This is an attempt to reframe my own understanding of the origin of evil and original sin.
Here's what it looks like. Disobeying God = Evil. Obeying God = Good. If you the Christian agree with this, seems fair to say Adam and Eve had intrinsic knowledge of Good and Evil before eating the forbidden fruit gaining the knowledge of good and evil. If Adam and Eve had no intrinsic knowledge that disobedience was evil and to avoid it, and obedience was good and to do that instead, what basis did God originally have rights to hold them to account?
I'll argue for the Christian here. Suppose a parent says to the child, "don't eat that, you'll get sick and die." The child has never died before, so he's not learning from experience that death is to be avoided. Neither has he ingested poison to know from experience that it's bad and should be avoided. What's the dynamic between commands to be obeyed resulting in obedience? Is there some intrinsic quality of knowing?
I'm attempting to establish the real difference between plain obedience and knowledge. They must be inherently different otherwise the Adam and Eve story falls apart for me. Again, if in the context of a creature/God relationship can grant the creatures knowing disobedience is evil, shouldn't it follow that they both had knowledge of good and evil before supposedly gaining it by eating the fruit?