AB,
As I inferred earlier, animal behaviour is much more predictable than human behaviour. All animal behaviour I am aware of can be defined from either built in instinct or learnt behaviour and can be generated without the need for conscious awareness. We have the expertise to write computer programs which would simulate animal behaviour from their sensory input data, and it would include a learning capability. If you remove free will from the scenario, then I would agree that human behaviour too could be simulated in this way, and there would be no need for conscious awareness because everything would be generated from the sub conscious.
"Implied" not "inferred", and whether or not non-human animal behaviour is "more predictable" than human behaviour is moot. Either way though, degrees of predictability are on a spectrum - you have all you work ahead of you still to demonstrate a qualitative difference between human and non-human behaviour, and especially between human behaviour and the behaviour of other animals with a pre-frontal cortex.
And again, you conflate "free will" with "Alan Burns's version of free will that entails another agency entirely at the controls for which there'e neither need nor evidence of any kind, and that would itself in any case face the same problem of having
another little man to tell
it what to do and so on
ad infinitum".
But the truth I perceive is that I am not driven solely by instinct and learnt experiences. Awareness of by brain activity allows me to interact with it to allow my conscious awareness to override instinctive behaviour and do things driven by free will. This is what makes me human.
No it isn't. You don't "interact" with your brain activity, you
are your brain activity. That may nonetheless be
a truth "as you perceive it", but the hopelessness of your reasoning leaves the rest of us with no choice but to conclude that you're completely wrong about that.