fallen = came down, the sons of God are ETs
The Sons of God, never fell. Adam was the only one who it was said to be fallen.
The Serpent, and Nephilim, were the ETs in the narrative. My claim is that there were 6th day created beings through the entire universe and not just on the planet earth. That at one point they could travel throughout the universe, and even humans could do so, if they chose. I realize that most think that humans on earth were just children, but from the Bible, only Adam and Eve were "kept in the dark".
Morality is a human notion, one we dont associate with animals
Wiping a human's memory does not make them less moral. It just means they do not associate life with morality. We would associate that with innocence or a childlike quality. I am not even going to go with the evolutional theory that we are a step above because of evolution. If other humans want to classify themselves as part of the animal world, perhaps animals may be offended....
If humans had never been confident before modern times, our species wouldn't have lived long enough to have this current modern time. And guess what - every human generation felt their time was modern. I seem to recall reading about an ancient Greek complaining about how rude and lazy and shiftless the young people of his time were. Not a lot has changed in the intervening millennia, has it?
Are other species confident? I think that species can survive without the need to feel confident. I have heard that wisdom is not confidence about one's own accomplishments, but acknowledging the past and it's experiences.
Knowing good and evil shows us the need to be moral through reasoning and experience. If other species had a knowledge of good and evil, they too would have some essence of morality. Having such knowledge does not make us moral beings. Morals are just an outcome of going through such experiences.
If we were told that killing is ok, because it may be justified, how long would it take for the species to figure out that killing may be wrong, and justification becomes too weak, to keep on killing? What makes killing even evil? If killing was in fact, not evil, then killing would never be morally wrong, no matter how often it was experienced. Animals kill all the time. Is it wrong for them to do so? We have made it legal to kill in some cases and we have adjusted by claiming that it is morally acceptable to do. If death is natural, then how can it even by evil? We even have to justify why we think that death is evil in some cases and not evil in other cases. Why do we even have the authority to do so? It seems because we do have the knowledge of what evil is.
Can we even imagine if killing was taken out of the moral system, and was never seen as evil? We would still be moral beings, but life would be drastically different. I don't think that we could conclude that we would kill each other off, nor would there be total peace and serenity from the lack of people being killed by other people. Now some claim that knowing evil, makes us human. I would claim that not knowing evil makes us something else besides the rest of the species on earth. From what knowledge I have, I would say that the other species on earth experience evil, even if they do not seem to have knowledge of evil. Not knowing evil, or experiencing evil would put us into a different realm of experience, than we can imagine, because we retain the knowledge of evil even if we do not experience it. I would go to the next step and say that we cannot even control evil. If we could it would have to be done on a level of thought, that would negate any experiences as well as imaginations. Having knowledge of evil and it having no effect, may make us immortal though, as if death was removed from every aspect of life. The universe is more vast than the necessity for there to be a limit to any life.
@ Leoreth
The video forgot to mention, that the Hebrew Torah was Tho and Ra.