There is some advantage to ignorance. The punishment is not as bad. Ignorant people do not excape the consequences of their actions. For me it would be better to know the truth so you can avoid adversity. If I were to go somewhere I would want a map or directions on how to get there. The Bible gives us directions on how to get through life.
It's better to know the truth...therefore you commit a series of logical fallacies that make it impossible for you to objectively know the truth, and indeed make it impossible for you to recognize it if it (metaphorically) came up and slapped you round the face with a wet fish?
To clarify, the list of logical fallacies I can find (in no particular order):
Argument from authority: the Bible
Begging the question: the Bible
Argument at populi: the Bible
God of the Gaps: creation
False premises: left, right, and centre
Homunculus fallacy: God
Cherry picking: as above; conditions for life are perfect in our universe, therefore it must have been God's doing.
Luke 12 48 parphrase "But the servant who didn't know [what his master wanted] and did things for which he deserved punishment will receive a light beating. A lot will be expected from everyone who has been given a lot. More will be demanded from everyone who has been entrusted with a lot."
This is begging the question. Why are you assuming the Bible is a legitimate authority, when the argument you are using it as evidence for is related, itself, to the authenticity and validity of the Bible as an authority?
So you figure science has nothing to do with knowing? What, guessing may be a better term for what science does?
I never said anything like this.
Ha. Well, if you do not know, how would you expect to overrule God and His word?
You still haven't answered my question. You cannot make a case for why God should logically exist. Why should I obey something that doesn't exist?
Also, are you honestly saying that because we do not know, we should therefore accept God's (and therefore the Bible's, by proxy) version of events, as interpreted by an arbitrary person sometime between now and ~1000BCE?
Thankfully I can post links now. So I can direct you to read this before you try affirm this again:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_of_the_Gaps