So an all potent and wise being creates humans with all their flaws and curiosity with zero life experience and to occupy their time they can like admire the scenery, name animals and the like so if we looked at this it would sound like they are behaving like children, have tasks of the children and no responsibilities. No hardship, no needs.....
Then this all potent being puts in middle of the garden something intriguing and tells them not to touch it, lets an agitator snake in and suddenly it is the human`s choice ( female of course) the led to fall.
Does not really make any sense does it unless you consider it foreordained which of course seems a pretty nasty thing to do to humans.
How can anyone take this being anything other than allegory is beyond me.
There is a ton of information we learn from the garden scenario, whether it is actual or allegorical.
In the story (true or not) humans are made “very good” by God’s standard of very good, but they are not “perfect” like Christ is perfect, so what is lacking?
There are just somethings that are impossible to do like: make a being which has always existed (Christ has always existed so a clone of Christ cannot be made), so what can God not create from the start in a human?
What humans are lacking and God could not provide to humans instinctively is what could have kept them from sinning, so yes, they will sin, but sin unfortunately can help them in fulfilling their earthly objective and obtain what they are lacking. So, what is our objective?
Answer me this: Would you prefer to be in a place where your eternal close relationship with God was dependent on your personal ability to obey God (the Garden) or in a place where your eternal close relationship with God is dependent on your just humbly accepting His Charity as charity (where you are now)?
The Garden story helps us understand why what we might consider an ideal place is actually a lousy place to fulfill our objective, while this messed up world is the best place for willing individuals to fulfill their objective.
Much more can be said if you want to really talk about it.