No - your over active fallacy detector has got it wrong again, Gordon.
Nope.
It is nothing to do with my personal likes or dislikes.
Yes it is: very much so, hence your rejection of determinism, which is why you attempt to subdivide it, where acceptance of it is the death knell for your particular approach to your faith (the 'souls' bit).
It is a simple fact that physical determinism can't be used to explain how I can invoke consciously driven choices.
A choice which can't be derived from the uncontrollable physically determined reactions of purely material entities
Let's all say a big hello to Mr Personal Incredulity, again (with a dash of argument from ignorance)!
Conscious choices are not random, Gordon.
I didn't say they were, Alan.
They are determined by your own conscious will.
Which in turn is subject to determinism, unless you make random choices (which I suspect is impossible anyway).
But conscious awareness and freedom to choose are not natural properties of a purely material universe driven by nothing but the pre determined reactions to previous physical events.
Yes they are. Leaving aside your usual use of hyperbole, it might not seem that way to you when it comes to deciding whether you want tea or coffee, to go for a swim or not , or whatever: but it probably is that way irrespective of your personal preferences since if not then your choices would be undetermined (random), and you'd never make it through the average day in that situation.
To add a touch of hyperbole of my own, Alan: you are a biological robot at the mercy of underlying unconscious desires and cumulative circumstances and influences in the universe, and no doubt a degree of luck (or not) in a few situations.
Biology describes and defines the physical mechanisms associated with our human bodies, but it does not define what is in control.
It does if this control is biological. I'd suggest that 'define' isn't a good term here: describe is quite sufficient.
You are in control.
My brain seems to be in control, which is indistinguishable from 'me', but I'm not sure it is really in control.
Pre defined reactions to physical events can by definition offer no control - just inevitable reaction.
Don't be so silly: you can think and make choices, but what you think and choose isn't ring-fenced from everything else.
You need to get to grips with this, Gordon, and come to terms with the fact that you comprise far more than what can be achieved by a blob of the continuum of this material universe entirely driven by the unguided, aimless, uncontrollable forces of nature.
Here we go with the hyperbole: speaking as one blob to another, you've had this explained before (such as by Stranger, and others) and the reason you can't accept determinism is that to do so would negate your particular approach to faith - and that is a consequence you are protecting yourself from by indulging in illogical and fallacious thinking.