My take on conscious control of my thoughts is quite simple.
Yes, it is. You just keep asserting it without addressing the logical problems.
In order to solve problems, contemplate mysteries or come up with verified conclusions I need some way of manipulating the data which exists in my conscious awareness in order to reach consciously verified solutions. My conscious ability to control my thought processes is the source of this manipulation.
That's just another assertion. Something that logically leads to an infinite regress cannot be the source of any sort of manipulation. Also, none of this tells me
what it even means to consciously control our own thoughts, if it doesn't involve consciously thinking about each conscious thought before we think ir, which is clearly impossible.
We can make a choice (which, like any other choice, is just what we want to do most at the time - something we have no control over) to
try to concentrate on some subject, but we have no conscious control over what thoughts will occur to us or even if we will be able to concentrate sufficiently on the subject. Thoughts occur as they occur, new insight happens when it happens. We
obviously have no concious control over it.
I see no need for infinite regress.
Obviously you don't want to think about it. I explained why it would occur and you've basically ignored it and just made another baseless assertion that it isn't needed. You need explain
how it's avoided. That means you need to address what I said. That, in turn, means you need to open your mind and at least
try to concentrate.
And I see no other viable source of control other than my conscious self.
Then you obviously don't want to think about that either.
I am fully aware that this does not fit well with the concept of conscious awareness being an emergent property of material reactions - but this is the source of where we differ...
No, it isn't. My point is an
entirely logical one. It has
NOTHING to do with
any theory of consciousness.
...because my conscious self comprises far more than anything which can be derived from material reactions alone.
Another baseless assertion.
Do you really not see a difference between a logical argument and mindless, thought-free assertion?