AB,
You misunderstood.
I implied that if consciousness is an emergent property of physical reactions, there can be no means of feedback from what we are aware of to the reactions from which our consciousness emerges.
I don’t know what you’re trying to say here. Simply though: consciousness as an emergent property of vast numbers of interacting component parts would feel just as if there was a separate “you”, even though it’s an integrated single entity process.
Past events can certainly influence our conscious choices, but they do not dictate them - otherwise it would be no choice, just an unavoidable reaction.
Your use of “dictate” is poisoning the well somewhat, but essentially “determined by prior events” does the job. Again though, so what? All that would mean (and likely does mean) is that your experience of “choice” isn’t somehow untethered from antecedent events. This seems to offend you in some way because you prefer the narrative your decision-making feels like over the way it is – which is an error in reasoning called the
argumentum ad consequentiam (as has been explained to you many times here).
Our human soul exists and acts in the present - it defines the present, and as such it is not subject to the endless chains of cause and effect we perceive in material entities.
It would have been quicker for you to have typed “it’s magic innit”. If you want to assert into existence a “soul” for which there’s no evidence at all and which by some unexplained means makes decisions of its own and then tells a sort of zombie “you” what to do then you have an epic job to make the case for it. Good luck with it though.
You seem to be implying that your freedom to make conscious choices is just a feeling rather than a reality. It is a mystery to me how you can come to this conclusion without the conscious freedom to guide your own thoughts. Can you not contemplate that your perceived freedom is a reality? Are you afraid of facing the consequence of it being a reality? The most common phrase in the Christian bible is "do not be afraid".
The irony of that being that you seem to be terrified of actually addressing the arguments that falsify the various faith claims you try to justify with very bad reasoning. Yes, our experience of decision-making at one level of abstraction is “free – which is why for example we have legal systems that judge us for the decisions we make – but at a deeper level of abstraction it’s quickly apparent (at least to some of us) that "the way it feels” cannot be the way it
is without collapsing immediately into various intractable logical contradictions.
I have more pieces than you
Very funny. I can tell you lot about evidence-based explanations – or at least neuroscientists, logicians and the like can. These are pieces of the jig-saw. You on the other hand can tell us precisely nothing about your notion “soul” – what it’s made of, where it lives, how it makes decisions without antecedent reasons, how it interacts with “you”. You have no answers at all about these and many other questions – that is, you have no pieces of the jig-saw
at all (other than the word “soul”).
Again then: why do you think having no pieces of the jig-saw gives you a better shot at seeing the picture than having some of the pieces?