AB,
Thank you for another detailed response.
I will try to answer your points before we set off for a cycling holiday in the Loire, France.
You’re welcome, and I hope you have a nice holiday.
God is that which exists.
A doughnut is “that which exists” – it’d be a pretty rubbish dictionary though that defined every noun as “that which exists” don’t you think?
And the difference between a doughnut and your “God” by the way is that I can provide evidence that former does in fact exist.
Soul is a single entity of awareness which perceives and wilfully interacts with our physical world.
Yes I know that to be your assertion, but even conceptually it’s so beset with logical contradictions that it collapses as soon as you examine it. What you were actually asked for though was a
definition, not a job description. What
is this “soul” that you think carries out these activities?
And while you’re at it, how do you propose to define “spiritual” other than as a place marker for “it's magic”?
I prefer to use my God given gift of faith rather than just say "I don't know".
First, your claim of “a God given gift of faith” is just a speculation on your part. Retreating to it whenever you’re asked something about why you think there's a “God” at all doesn’t help you.
Second, you were actually asked (but just ignored) whether or not you understand why the argument from personal incredulity you keep attempting is such a bad one. Whether the answer to “how does X work then?” is, “here’s a very robust explanation”, “here’s a partial but logically consistent explanation” or “no idea” tells you nothing whatever about whatever alternative you might want to use to fill the gap.
All I’m asking you is whether you now understand this and, if you do, then I’m suggesting too that you stop doing it.
The key word you use here is "interpretation". Can science be used to define conscious interpretation? What is it that interprets?
Yes it can, and “what interprets” is conscious self-awareness. This has been known for a 100 years or more – it would take you very little time and effort to find out what neuroscience actually does tell us.
Why not then do that?
I am well aware of the neuroscientists who try to explain human perception in terms of brain activity, but it all boils down to correlation rather than a true explanation of how it works.
That’s fundamentally misguided. Apples falling off trees “correlates” with the theory of gravity, and
vice versa. That’s what
all science does – it provides explanatory models that most closely correlate to observable phenomena, but it never claims certainty about anyhting.
In the physical deterministic scenario I can see no difference in what drives the events. Emergence can only be seen as emergence through conscious human perception which can identify meaning.
That’s just incoherent. What are you trying to say here?
My pointing out in past posts did include reasons and evidence which seem to have been ignored
That’s not true – you have produced neither reasons that are cogent, nor evidence that’s investigable.
Why would you even suggest otherwise given the ease with which the claim can be checked and shown to be false?