It appears to be the same reason most people rebel against God - they want what satan promises them. So they engage in willfully allowing themselves to be deceived in the hopes that they will get what they want.
Your suggestion is based on a false premise that the problem with people's lives is they lack sufficient information to do what is right.
There are drug addicts that will openly tell you they know their habit is going to kill them one day - they just decide they want the drugs more than they want life.
The problem here is not a lack of information about the consequences of their lifestyle, but a choice they make. The reasons for which can be varied, but it utimately comes down a choice.
It seems you are claiming God should be required to give Adam and Eve his entire omniscient understanding of what their choice would result in and that what He did tell them wasn't sufficient.
This comes back around to the same fallacious thinking you had that people will always do the right thing if they are given enough information. No, because that assumes they will want to believe the information that is true when it is presented to them.
Clearly this is not always the case with people.
This is the main theme of this post, so I've gathered a bunch of the quotes together here; with special exceptions below.
What are some reasons why someone might make a choice with negative consequences?
1) They might believe they can avoid the consequences in some way (maybe the consequences aren't real, maybe they can win a confrontation, etc.)
2) They might believe that they can accomplish a goal while suffering negative consequences (a sacrifice for some goal believed in)
3) They might make a choice with negative consequences because they don't care about the negative consequences, or actively seek the negative consequences, or despise whatever positive thing the choice harms (or you might just say "because they are evil" in some worldviews)
4) They might make a choice with negative consequences because they are not rational/reasonable
With Adam and Eve, we're talking about a pre-Fall choice (since we're wondering why the Fall happened in the first place). So in your worldview, do you not have to go ahead and weed out (3) as a possibility?
Information weeds out (1) and (2) as possibilities (and this is why I bring up God giving them information). If they know the consequences are real and that they can't "win" a confrontation with God (and they know there is no reason to have a confrontation with God, at that), then (1) is weeded out. If they know that it isn't some sacrifice that will have positive side-benefits to make the choice, then that weeds out (2).
Seems like we're left with wondering: were Adam and Eve rational/reasonable actors? This opens a whole can of worms, like "how much is God culpable for how much humans value reason?" For instance, could God have made humans less or more reasonable by nature? If so, then doesn't it stand to reason that God could have made Adam and Eve reasonable enough not to make a choice with negative consequences out of sheer irrationality?
If God has no control over how rational humans are, then doesn't it stand to reason that it does become a probability game: given enough time, the humans will eventually make the bad choice: the probability approaches one? You have earlier stated that this isn't the case, so it seems like you must reject out of hand that God doesn't have control over how rational humans are: it seems a consequence, if you want to stick to that notion, that God can make humans highly or even perfectly rational!
But if God can create Adam and Eve to be rational beings, and we can weed out (1) and (2) if God gives them information, and we can rule out (3) since this is pre-Fall corruption, what is left to explain why Adam and Eve would make a choice with bad consequences?
If you say, "they could deceive themselves because they want something to be true that's not true," that would be irrational: so the question becomes, "why didn't God make them more rational?" If you say, "God couldn't have made them more rational," then the problem becomes, "OK, then eventually, given enough time, they would have made an irrational choice, the probability would have approached one: so the Fall was inevitable, and God had to have known that!" Doesn't that seem like a problem?
Addendum: if you believe that in the future, humans will never make bad choices again, and you say God will "remake" them in some other way, that seems to indicate they'll never make bad choices for irrational reasons, which seems to indicate you do believe God has power over how rational humans are. N'est-ce pas? Then why would self-deception ever be a problem unless God desires it to be?
The best objection to this little spiel I can think of is attacking, as you have, the premise that giving information can weed out (1) and (2). You said:
Because if you aren't going to believe God when he tells you His word is truth and this tree is bad, then why would you be more likely to listen if he merely elaborated more on why the tree is bad?
You could just as easily assume he's lying about all those details too.
I'm spitballing here, but doesn't it feel prima facie like an omnipotent and omniscient being could do something convincing to convince a rational actor? If the actor is rational, then they're not going to have a position of radical skepticism where they think God's lying "just because," or "because it's possible." If the actor is rational, they would weigh the consequences of God telling the truth vs. God lying. God could do something like implant a picture in their mind showing the horrors of the modern world (where it isn't real, and no one really ever suffered in merely transmitting the idea). God could prove things that Satan can't, God can reveal Satan's origin and the reasons Satan might be lying (whereas Satan can only respond with "nuh uh" and "oh yeah, well what if God is lying?")
Parents grow tired of childrens' questions because parents are finite and have fundamentally limited ability to transmit information: God suffers neither tiring nor these limitations. There is no reason God can't give Adam and Eve literally everything they require to make an informed, rational choice. Unless you presume God can't build them rational, in which case you suffer the other problem (where, if God can't build them rational, then the probability they will choose wrong eventually for sheerly irrational reasons converges to one).
3. You have no reason to believe God would not have a good reason for limiting information to the bare essentials even if God did do that. If we assume God is all good and all knowing then that would mean God has a good reason for doing this that is actually the best option to take.
4. You are assuming Adam is capable of being downloaded with the omniscience of God. But you can't assume that is the case. Based on how God has set up the universe's limits with space-time, and the limits God may have built into Adam, you have no reason to assume the entirety of God's understanding could be comprehended by Adam.
You may ask, why didn't God create Adam differently or the universe differently?
But you have no reason to assume God didn't have a good reason for how he did create Adam and the universe.
If we assume God is all good, and all knowing, as the Bible tells us He is, then we must logically assume God has good reason for how he has designed things.
These epistemic traps would be better debated under the epistemic trap section of the debate, because you can build anything with this form and never escape from it once you do, etc. These are conversation enders because you can "justify" anything and never be convinced otherwise once you adopt these. Literally nothing could be evidence against them, even if God created tortureworld ran by Pinhead and Freddy Krueger where everyone on Earth is pulled apart by hooked chains every day for eternity*. There are meta-epistemic reasons not to hold these, in other words.
(* -- I feel compelled to nip a possible objection in the bud: I am not presuming that the tortureworld scenario would be inherently bad. I'm pointing out that it really could be explained by the epistemic trap despite our intuition: it is meant only to show that literally nothing could ever be evidence against the epistemic trap, not even the most extreme appearances)
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