Robert Joseph Fischer

If Eve had Taken a Course on The Six Thinking Hats, Would She Have Eaten the Apple?

How did Eve know?

The Six Hats thinking method, is designed to help people think better and make better decisions. I thought to myself "What could be a better blog topic than to study the first great decision that mankind ever made?"

I am referring, of course, to the decision Eve made in the Garden of Eden when she chose to eat the forbidden fruit. When Eve ate the fruit she disobeyed God. We have been taught this was the original sign and was the cause of all of mankind's hardships. Having read the story many times, let me say I believe almost every Biblical scholar has interpreted this event incorrectly and the original sin was not Eve's disobedience to God. Her act of sharing the fruit with Adam was the original sin. Examining the story critically without the constraints of religious dogma yields a much different interpretation of the acts in the garden than we have been taught. And it can lead us to important lessons and decision-making rules we can apply today.

Consider that Eve may have lived in the garden for a relatively short time when she encountered the talking serpent. The Bible tells us that Eve was very beautiful and she and Adam wore no clothes and Adam loved Eve very much. The implication is that Adam and Eve were having normal marital relations, but she had not yet had time to conceive a child when she encountered the serpent. So perhaps she was only a few months old when this occurred. The Bible does not make it clear how old Eve was, but it is clear that the serpent had been in the garden longer since God had created the animals before he had created Eve. So Eve encounters a talking serpent; this must have been an extraordinary event since other than God, Eve, and Adam, no other personages speak in the garden. The talking serpent suggests she eat from the tree of life. Eve says no, since God has told her she will die if she eats from the tree. The serpent says God is not correct and she will be omnipotent if she eats from the tree. Eve now becomes the first human to make a decision under uncertainty. Clearly, both God and the serpent cannot be correct. She must decide if she should risk death in order to have the chance to become omnipotent.

Eve, carried away by the dream of becoming God-like, ignores the risk and eats the forbidden fruit. We know the rest of the story.

Many scholars, parents, and school children have been critical of Eve's decision, but I think they are unfair to her. The normal ways that people make decisions under uncertainty today were not available to her then. Let's remember, Eve never took a course on logic. Neither probability theory nor utility theory had been developed yet either so there was no way to analyze the risk/reward relationship. She could not consult her Bible to see what had happened to people in the past who had disobeyed God. It simply hadn't been written yet. She did not have de Bono's book on the six thinking hats. How was she to make this decision?

What is more, it seems almost impossible to believe she fully understood the risks, since no one had ever died in the Garden of Eden. She clearly did not do any black hat thinking before she ate the apple. Eve's concept of death had to be fairly abstract. I have asked Biblical scholars this question and I always get the same answer: Eve should have known to obey God. But how was she to know this? She really had no basis for making this decision. Religious scholars fall victim to the circular logic Edward warns about when they use this argument.

Eve's decision had bad consequences for her as it meant she had to leave the garden and ultimately die, but we cannot call it a bad decision. Rather it was a decision with bad results. Given what she knew at the time, she simply gambled and lost. The original sin was to give the fruit to her husband. She gave it to him knowing full well it would cause his death and she did this because she did not want to face this by herself.
So my question is, if Eve had taken a course in the six hats, would she have eaten the apple?
Note, in my book www.nakedportfoliomanager.com I tell the story of my seven year old asking me about Adam and Eve. Abigail asked me if God did not want Adam and Eve to eat from the apple tree, then why didn't he build a fence around it? In other words, "Is the story of Adam and Eve about God's failure to protect his children?" It seems that when you look at the Boble though the mind of a seven year old you can see things in a new way. PO did God make a mistake?

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Anthony Halaris Comment by Anthony Halaris on June 29, 2010 at 2:00pm
...Wonder what Eve thought about eclipses... ?
If ... Eve standing between the Sun and Moon
then ... discovers the shadows in her eyes
Why not explore the dark side of her psyche?


- Adonis
Franis Comment by Franis on June 26, 2010 at 1:19pm
OK, so as not to derail this thread, I started another thread for Bontos in the discussion forum.
Thanks for the examples to do that with - Anthony!

BTW, I just returned from a walk to see the lunar eclipse that was only visible from the Southern hemispheres. Did anyone from "down under" happen to also see it tonight?

...Wonder what Eve thought about eclipses... ?
Anthony Halaris Comment by Anthony Halaris on June 26, 2010 at 12:41pm
Franis,

No ... I did not!


Two men fought with custard pies
Each man thought "the other lies!"
Yellow splatters covered both
Well, all matters further growth.
©Robin Damion & Edward de Bono Creative Team 1997

the judge paid the villain
for he stole a million
all the villain could say
crime does not pay
©Igshan Bodiat & Edward de Bono Creative Team 1997

Take a seed and a shower
Add some sun, get a flower.
All this cause and effect
Is it just intellect?
©Jim Duthoit & Edward de Bono Creative Team 1997

The English love the rain,
It allows them to complain.
The sun makes you content,
But rain is heavan sent.
©Jim Duthoit & Edward de Bono Creative Team 1997

--- You first!
--- Promise
Franis Comment by Franis on June 26, 2010 at 12:27pm
Hey Anthony -
Yes - and where would we be without the Blarney Stone?

Sure I like poetry. Twitter has made me become better at saying quite a bit in a short little words...

Come to think of it, - Do you know about Bontos?
We used to have a Bonto thread. Maybe we could start another thread...like that.
Anthony Halaris Comment by Anthony Halaris on June 26, 2010 at 11:25am
Franis,

I truly thought you liked poetry ... oh well what do I know about you?
But ....

Poetry has been around for over 5,00 years and it's still young, vibrant, and growing.

Poetry might even go further into the past, since most people memorized poetry and passed it on orally; 5,000-year-old poems from Mesopotamia could have already been old when they were written.

The practice of memorizing poetry and passing it on by word of mouth is pretty much gone.

Where we would be without Poetry?

Where would we be without Homer ... the first psychologist?




And then, Rossetti ... ? The poet and painter ... connecting spirit and flesh


- Polyhymnia ...muse of Oratory, Sacred Hymns, and Poetry


Erato - Muse of Love Poetry


Edward de Bono



Po : Beyond Yes / No
Franis Comment by Franis on June 25, 2010 at 9:44am
Stephen, lots of us do not follow Anthony. But that seems to be what Anthony is here to do. He provides the non-sequitur confusion.
Anthony - so you think I'm a poetess? I've never had to deal with that accusation before.
Although, I do have a phone number that spells out, "HIT-POET" if you assign the letters on the phone keypad to the numbers... Sort of an oxymoron - to be popular "hit" poet. Being a poet is the one thing that is out of fashion at the current moment in my culture. Sort of like talking about Bible stories is another thing that is out of fashion at the moment. But here we are...

Did I not read somewhere in the past couple of years or so that genetically, it was found by DNA testing that all humanity did, in fact, come from the same female?
Anthony Halaris Comment by Anthony Halaris on June 24, 2010 at 11:22pm
Stephen,

Anthony,

Are you ok? Sorry but I dont follow you anymore.
Maybe there is some other way


Have you read ... Edward's book on "Water Logic"?

If NOT I started a group ... you can join ... if you have ... then you can contribute as well

Good day!
Anthony Halaris Comment by Anthony Halaris on June 24, 2010 at 11:16pm
Anthony - have you tried sitting on one of those big exercise balls? I do that.

I have ... it helps me with stretching ...

Do I carry the big exercise ball like Atlas?

No ... I gave it to Heracles ... he is stuck with it for a while LOL

Franis, you are a poetess ... join in ... it will be a pleasure ... as wells as Wilfred he is a poet as well
Franis Comment by Franis on June 24, 2010 at 8:59am
For Anthony:
How do women walk in the South Pacific? --
They mostly walk in flip-flops, actually.
Franis Comment by Franis on June 24, 2010 at 8:58am
Wilfred - Happy to read you are overloaded! This means your brain is carving new pathways. Blink often when you change focus... and look away from the screen for a moment to avoid computer headaches.
I do not mind reading your use of English - it is stimulating to my thinking ability. Thank you for offering your ideas in a language I can read. Although English is my native language, I am always translating because my natural thinking ability does not seem to be in language!

Anthony - have you tried sitting on one of those big exercise balls? I do that.

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