a. Adam had access to an unsullied creation, which we don't.
I don't see how that makes a difference. The issue is the mind of the scientist not the raw materials with which he had to work. Your raw materials define what you can do with them, that is all.
If it is the creation itself that reveals God, as you have said many times, and we learn more of Him by studying it, then yes, the raw materials matter very MUCH. They are the revelation. Not just your mind. Your mind is what comprehends what God made. But if you see is not what God made, but a messed up version of it, then you will often not be making real judgements about God because you are not seeing His real creation.
b. Adam had direct access to the creator. Which we don't.
That is not true. Our problem is not access, but the quality of the access. Prayer is access. The difference between our access and Adam's may be the difference between digital and analog but access is not a problem. Direct access does not mean you make the best use of it.
Yes quite true, but then you are making the source of inspiration revelation, which you seem quite loathe to do in the case of Paul, etc. If you can have direct access to God, why not Paul? You seem to be arguing against your own case here. How were the disciples who had direct access to Jesus, and to God through prayer less informed than Adam?
c We are limited to experimentation, Adam could just ask.
Another misconception. God wanted Adam to experiment. This is why he was told to keep the garden. God did not tell him how to keep the garden. Experimentation is a divinely given method of divining the truth. We have already determined that we can also ask.
Where does it say that:
a. God told him to keep the garden for the mere sake of experimenting? If I recall He told him to rule over the whole place.
b. God did not explain anything further to him? This is an argument from silence on both counts. We don't know that He did , and we don't know that He didnt. What we do know is that Adam COULD ask. Which is what my statement was.
d. If Adam fell once, how does it follow that we, who sin all the time, know more than him?
Because we have learned from the experience of all those who went before us. It is the same reason why we know more than any who came before us. Adam had potential.
According to Romans, again that troublesome Paul guy you are not big on, the people of the earth were darkened in their understanding by ages of sin. Our mental faculties also would be reduced over time, because we are also part of God's decaying creation. which you freely admit. And learning from their mistakes is again learning from inspiration since it is there that they are recorded. But you don't seem to want to accept revelation.
Moreover, your argument was that
a. Adam was not well informed
b. the disciples were worse informed than seemingly anyone
c. we are very well informed.
how is it that the disciples having many of the examples we did would not be MORE informed than Adam, as you claim we are? Your whole argument is woefully inconsistent. You seem to have an agenda to belittle the disciples. Why? I can only assume because you don't want to listen to the inspiration they claim to have. This is a consistent theme.
e. Do we have any clue what it was that they knew back then? You seem to suggest they knew less. On what basis? The fall? Then again, why do we fall?
My basis is the fact that discovery and learning are the hallmarks of being human. If man knew everything there was to know he would be God nor would not need the brain he was given. God placed Adam on a journey of discovery and we have been building on that ever since.
Again, you give no credit to the disciples who were further along, but only to yourself. Sometimes we don't learn lessons from seeing mistakes. Sometimes we just plow on. And when we get rid of the very inspiration meant to teach us those lessons, how do we then learn from them?
It is clear that you want to
a. establish that Adam was not knowledgeable enough to be accountable. Which is a statement the Bible never makes.
b. establish that the disciples were dumber than rocks so they need not be listened to.
c. establish that even modern day secular scientists are smarter about God than either of the above...in fact your argument should be that secular scientists are smarter than you about God because they study the creation more and have a better understanding.
This is not learning from the past, this is belittling the past to make ourselves look better.
f. you then go on to say that the disciples were worse off then Adam. Perhaps so for a time. But then through the Holy Spirit they too had access to the creator, who revealed what He chose to. Perhaps not as much as to Adam, but we don't really know that.
The disciples repeatedly mucked up what Jesus taught them on a personal level. Read Mark 10 for insight there. Apart from the fact that the Holy Spirit's ministry is not as direct as the personal ministry of Jesus, the Holy Spirit teaches; He does not make you understand. That is the responsibility of the human instrument. You do not become smarter by going to a better school with better teachers. You have to study.
It is not scientific advances that make us better able to understand. We have made scientific advances because we have a better understanding.
So the statement that the Spirit would lead them into all truth, that wasn't inspired either was it? For that matter, being around the direct revelation of God in human form was not better than just looking at some rocks? I don't think this is at all consistent.
And again your better understanding comes from one of two sources:
a. Their mistakes, and revelation, which you seem to dismiss because they were all confused. So sorry, that one doesn't work for you.
b. better understanding of the created order. The very understanding of which the majority of scientists interpret to do away with God. Obviously it has not increased their understanding much.
I really can't see that we would be any better informed than Adam about God, with one exception. We know good from evil. And that knowledge was far too expensive.
And I can't really see that we are much better off than the apostles, except that we have the record of what they left us, in addition to whatever else we have learned about God. But since you seem intent on downplaying what they left us, what do you have?