AB,
It also underpins my conception of the reality that I am able to make a conscious choice which is not pre determined by the cause and effect chains over which there is no control.
A perception which – as has been explained to you many times now – is almost certainly wrong.
I would also contend that this reality is perceived by over 99 of the human population.
“This” reality might well be, but that’s just another attempt at an
argumentum ad populum. That for day-to-day purposes we proceed
as if we are free of the underlying substrate of cause and effect says nothing about whether we actually are.
This is a Christian thread, and I am simply doing my best to witness to the truth as Jesus asked me to do.
It’s actually a thread
about Christianity, not a thread to proselytise for it. You’ve also just committed the fallacy of reification again – you have no idea whether Jesus asked you to do anything, let alone whether even if he did it’s “the truth”.
And there are plenty of warnings in the New Testament about the ridicule we will have to endure in witnessing to the truth.
Identifying the holes in your arguments isn’t “ridiculing”, and of course it does – lots of religious texts get their retaliation in first this way as a defence mechanism.
But you seem to be allowing the limited knowledge arising from human scientific discoveries to override your perception of reality.
Of course. Our “perceptions of reality” are highly fallible, and have consistently been shown to be wrong when investigated using objective means. Perceptions of reality are essentially just
opinions – and there are as many of those as there are people to have them.
We are far from discovering the whole of reality, and we have no idea how much more there is to discover. Can you not see that current scientific knowledge may be too limited to draw the conclusion that our freedom to choose is an illusion.
Yes it may be. It may also be too limited to draw the conclusion that apples fall because of gravity when in fact it’s pixies with very thin strings doing it. The point though is that science provides models of reality that are the most consistently aligned with observation that we have. Faith beliefs, perceptions of reality etc on the other hand are essentially arbitrary. If you don’t believe me, try designing a parachute using “faith”.
You may be making the biggest mistake in your life in concluding that we cannot choose our own destiny, because this is the reason why God has given us this freedom.
And so might you be – especially as there are plenty of beliefs available in other gods just as petty and insecure as yours who would be just as upset with you for backing the wrong horse. The point though is that, while we
may be wrong (about anything), so far at least no-one has managed to provide a cogent argument to suggest that we
are.
Incidentally, I notice that you just ignored my earlier rebuttal of your notion “soul” is an “alternative explanation” for anything.
Oh well.