AB,
As I have said previously, if the only evidence being considered is limited to scientific knowledge of material properties and reactions, you are bound to come to a materialistic conclusion - but such a conclusion will fall far short of an explanation.
And has been explained to you before, “evidence” is a naturalistic concept. If you want to claim to have evidence of some other kind, then it’s your job to show that it is evidence rather than just assertion.
Why have you just made exactly the same mistake again therefore?
because we sometimes choose to give in to temptation instead of following our conscience
No, because as time passes information available changes and so our decisions change accordingly. That’s where you went wrong with your daftness about regret – the question is how a different decision could be made in IDENTICAL circumstances, not in circumstances that apply at a later time.
Most people acknowledge the reality that they have conscious control of their thoughts, words and actions, which is why they can justifiably regret that they may have miss-used their power to control.
Most people do, just as most people recognise that they touch the keys on front of them too. Thing is though, what most people “recognise” tells you very little about what most people KNOW.
As stated above, your restrictions on admissible evidence would automatically rule out any non physical cause.
As stated before, those “restrictions” concern only what the word “evidence” can MEAN. If you want to include as evidence anything that pops into your heard regardless of whether it’s investigable, measurable etc then I can claim on the same basis that rainbows are “evidence” for leprechauns.
by giving in to temptation to make what they know to be bad choices.
Utter bullshit. People often make decisions that they think are good, ethical, positive, whatever and only later on does experience or new data tell them that they were wrong. Either way though, that has absolutely nothing to do with the problem in LOGIC you’ve given yourself.
But if any philosophical contemplation was entirely driven by uncontrollable physical reactions I can't see how any credence could be attached to the result.
Why not, and why do you think your personal incredulity is a compelling argument in any case?
I do not believe the concept of meaning could ever come into our human awareness if there really was no meaning in life.
Like the concept of leprechauns couldn’t “come into our human awareness" if there really were no leprechauns you mean?