When the Serpent Speaks Again:
By lim ju boo (lin ru wu (林 如 武)
A Reflection on Knowledge, Wisdom, and the Craft of Confusion
It was after writing my earlier article, “From Fire to Fallout: The Ascent, Burden and Fall of Homo sapiens,” here,
https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/2026/04/from-fire-to-fallout-ascent-burden-and.html
that an interesting response arrived—one that was, at once, simple, sincere, and strangely revealing.
That response came from reader who is a highly qualified and learned senior engineer, having reached the closing portion of my above article where the ancient account of the serpent in the Garden of Eden was mentioned, paused not at its meaning, but at its mechanics. He wrote to me asking, with genuine curiosity, how a serpent he understood plainly as a snake could possibly talk to Eve to deceive her in the Garden of Eden? He remarked, it was the first time he ever heard that a snake, and the only one that could talk?
I must confess, I sat quietly for a moment not in confusion, but with a gentle smile of amusement. For in that single question lies a much larger story, not about serpents, but about the human mind itself. That question itself, the learned reader asked, triggers my mind to write this response.
It is a peculiar feature of modern thinking that we have become extraordinarily skilled at analysing the surface of things, while sometimes overlooking their depth. We have learned to dissect, to measure, to verify. We ask whether something is biologically possible, mechanically plausible, scientifically defensible. And these are, without question, important inquiries.
Yet there are moments when such precision, admirable as it is, becomes misplaced—not because it is wrong, but because it is incomplete.
To read the account of the serpent and ask how a serpent or a snake can talk is, perhaps, to approach a painting with a microscope. One may observe the texture of the paint, the arrangement of the pigments, even the chemical composition of the canvas—but miss entirely the image being conveyed.
For the “serpent” in that ancient narrative is not presented as a zoological specimen to be classified, but as a figure of remarkable subtlety—described not by its species, but by its character: crafty.
And what does this craftiness consist of?
Not in force, not in spectacle, but in suggestion.
“Did God really say…or did the serpent say?”
There is no command here, no overt deception, no dramatic display. There is only a question—carefully phrased, gently introduced, and profoundly effective. It does not impose; it invites. It does not declare; it insinuates.
And herein lies the deeper insight.
If one understands the serpent merely as a talking animal, one is left with a biological puzzle. But if one recognizes it as a representation of something far more intimate, the entire passage takes on a different dimension.
For the serpent, in this sense, may be understood not as an external creature that crawls and coils, but as an internal voice—the subtle movement within the human mind that introduces doubt where there was once clarity. Eve was doubtful when God told her not to eat or touch that fruit. Instead, she changed her mind.
From a spiritual perspective, this harmonizes with the understanding of Satan as a being not confined to physical form such as appearing as a serpent or a snake, but capable of influencing the mind, appearing not necessarily as something seen, but as something called thought - an evil, deceiving and doubtful thought I should say. If such a presence exists beyond the limitations of the material world, then it need not speak through vocal cords. It may instead “speak” through ideas, through suggestions, through the quiet and persuasive language of inner dialogue.
To ask how a snake or a serpent can speak or talk is not much different from Nicodemus who asked Jesus how can a man be born again back into his mother’s womb? Nicodemus was the Chief of the Pharisee. He was a great scholar with great knowledge considered a top-tier scholar and teacher of his day. Jesus refers him as the teacher of Israel in John 3:10. He was acknowledged as a prominent educator in Jewish Law and scripture. He was a Pharisee and Jewish ruler who quietly went to see Jesus at night to privately inquire about his teachings and miraculous signs.
Because of his status and knowledge, he secretly went to Jesus at night, out of caution to avoid the scrutiny of his peers to learn from Jesus or to have an uninterrupted, private conversation when Jesus told him unless he is born again he cannot enter heaven. Nicodemus interpreted this literally asking Jesus how can a person enter back into his mother’s womb to be born again, to which Jesus answered of a spiritual rebirth, not a physical one. This is the same as asking how a snake or a serpent can speak and talk. It was not the snake or the serpent that spoke, it was the spiritual mind that speaks
This is how confusion begins—not through ignorance, but through misdirected reasoning.
It is perhaps here that the distinction between knowledge and wisdom becomes most evident.
We live in an age where knowledge is abundant, structured, and readily accessible. Even without information accessible to us through books, research papers and periodicals, we may already acquired them through our previous education. One may spend years in universities to acquire them, accumulate strings of degrees behind our names, master disciplines, and even have a PhD with an impressive command of knowledge, scientific facts, and theories, give ourselves academic and professional titles, and yet we lack wisdom when we interpret spiritual verses physically and literally such as how a serpent or a snake could talk? A person may have a very high IQ, vast knowledge, highly intelligent, but this is not the same as having wisdom - if he has one? Yet, as experience so often reminds us, knowledge alone does not guarantee clarity of judgment.
As Albert Einstein once observed, “Imagination is more important than knowledge.” It is a statement frequently quoted, though perhaps not always fully appreciated and able to be understood by most people - now that I have explained its meaning.
For imagination, like knowledge, is a tool, powerful, expansive, and creative. But without guidance, it may just as easily construct illusions as it does insights.
This is where wisdom enters, quietly but decisively.
Knowledge accumulates; wisdom discerns.
Knowledge informs; wisdom interprets.
Knowledge answers; wisdom questions.
A knowledgeable person may understand how something works, yet fail to grasp why it matters, or whether it should be trusted at all.
Thus, one may possess the knowledge to question whether a snake can speak, yet lack the wisdom to ask what the “speech” represents.
And this, perhaps, is the more subtle challenge of our time.
For the “serpent” has not disappeared with the passing of ancient texts. It has merely adapted. It no longer needs to appear in symbolic form; it operates comfortably within the very faculties we prize most—reason, imagination, and intellectual inquiry and could easily deceive the human mind through religions, rituals, belief systems and even through scientific logic and reasoning
It speaks in half-questions, in re framed meanings, in gentle doubts that appear harmless, even sophisticated.
It asks again, in countless variations:
“Did God really say, did the serpent really speak…?”
And we, equipped with vast knowledge but sometimes lacking wisdom, find ourselves engaging the question—analyzing it, refining it, even defending it—without always recognizing its origin or its intent.
So the issue is no longer whether a serpent once spoke in a distant garden.
The more pressing question is whether we can recognize the voice when it speaks within us - and that's the serpent in us.
For in the end, the greatest deception is not the obvious falsehood, but the subtle distortion—the thought that feels like our own, yet leads us quietly away from clarity.
And perhaps that is why the ancient description remains so fitting, even today:
The serpent was not powerful.
It was not overwhelming.
It was simply…crafty.
And, that is the same serpent that shall destroy us and all humanity.
And that was also why I have written earlier - “From Fire to Fallout: The Ascent, Burden and Fall of Homo sapiens,” .