It Doesn't look like wishful thinking...
Well, what it 'looks like' to somebody is inherently subjective, I guess it might look different to you.
It could be wrong, but it's definitely out of order to dismiss a question on the ground of who it comes from or whether it smacks of whatever in your eyes.
I didn't dismiss it, I said quite clearly that we couldn't rule it out. I just found it quite funny that you rushed straight towards human exceptionalism, even though I'm not aware of any serious hypotheses along those lines, and given your beliefs.
Also in the article we have physicists who say the expanding block idea may undermine determinism and yet I know of one argument on here fuelled by an almost absolute commitment to Determinism...
If you're referring to the 'free will' Alan Burns debate, that's a mistake Alan keeps making too. I have repeatedly said that determinism simply doesn't matter one way or the other.
Until they are demonstrably wrong of course...
It's rather irrational to 'hold on' to ideas until they are shown to be wrong, unless you have a good reason to believe them in the first place. There are well tested theories and there are untested hypotheses and conjectures. You can find one or other of those more appealing, of course, that's human nature, but you have to wait for evidence before actually pretending it's any better than all the rest.
I cannot see how you can possibly get an illusion of movement and change in a universe that is static, that has no actual movement and change.
Personal incredulity and intuition have been little use in modern science.
''I don't know why and I'm not going to entertain explanations'' shows a commitment to agnosticism.
You really do have a very strange view of the way other people think. It seems quite common amongst some theists to simply fail to understand a lack of commitment. Like admitting to not knowing something is a totally alien concept to you.