Zen emphasises the importance of the experiential element in
religious experience, as opposed to what it sees as the trap of conceptualization: as
D. T. Suzuki put it, "fire. Mere talking of it will not make the mouth burn". Experiential knowledge has also been used in the
philosophy of religion as an argument against God's
omniscience, questioning whether God could genuinely know everything, since he (supposedly) cannot know what it is like to
sin. Commenting on the distinction between experiential knowledge and
propositional knowledge, analytic philosopher and theologian
William Lane Craig has stated in an interview with
Robert Lawrence Kuhn for the
PBS series
Closer to Truth that because experiential knowledge is appropriate to the
mind which does the knowing, in order for omniscience to be a cognitive perfection God's omniscience must entail God know only and all propositional truths and have only appropriate experiential knowledge. ==Ecology==