Talk:Omniscience/@comment-33031049-20180304172108/@comment-30766268-20180304202859

Inherent Omniscience is not like Instant Learning.

This is the situation in whcih when you want to know something, you immediately know it.

For example, you want to play the piano, but don't know how, you just say "I want to know how to play the piano" and then you know how to play the piano.

If you are in the middle of a fight, and your enemy is immensly strong, all you need to do is just think to yourself "i want to know how do defeat this person in _ seconds and in a way that won't harm me at all and I would barely need to use any force to do so", and bam, you know how to defeat this person in _ seconds and in a way that won't harm you at all and you would barely need to use any force to do so.

In a sense, it's selective omniscience.

Instead of you knowing everything there is to know, you chose what to know, and can put filters in your mind for unneseccery information.

As such, you might not know anything, but you know everything you need to know at any given moment.