Yes, I think we are creators as well, as we reflect God.
However, I don't think we are smart enough to come up with evil on our own, at least in the original sense that God created us. In the garden, there was a complete and total absence of any danger or any evil of any kind. Peace and security is in some sense the absence of evil and the absence of danger and reasons for anxiety. So if evil, or a corruption of perfection, was never seen before, and Adam and Eve were bathing in pure security and pure peace and pure perfection, what would give themselves to think that it was possible to take away that perfection, or that peace? What would make them even think that it was possible for there to even be anything to take it away?
I think evil actually came from the angels, who are smarter than us by an extraordinary magnitude. Some of the theologians of the church are of the opinion that the reason Lucifer fell was because he wanted to be more like God. Being an extraordinarily intelligent being, he would have known that he couldn't be as strong or stronger than God.
What I think that Lucifer really wanted....was to be independent of God. Everything he had came from him, but Lucifer wanted to have something that God didn't have, so that he too may be like a god.
So the only way he could have at least have been original, or independent of God in some manner, was to "create" something that God never "Created," and that was non-existence, in other words, corruption and sin.
This is speculation on my part by the way. I think the real reason Lucifer fell was because he wanted to do something that God couldn't do, and after some pondering, he introduced something unheard of, which was the opposite of perfection....sin.
And to pass on his said legacy, he went and corrupted Adam and Eve, our first parents. Their problem was probably curiosity, since how could you know that there was an evil? What is this evil? I can distinguish it by eating this fruit? I must check this out. How could God hide this evil from me? I'll show him!
speculation, again.