AB,
Just to clarify my own thoughts, your brain (conscious awareness) may well become aware of a desire to do something, but ultimately we have the freedom to choose whether or not to do it, how to do it and when to do it…
As ever, you fail to understand what “freedom” would actually have to entail for it not to collapse into incoherence. Freedom that’s contextualised and bounded by logically cogent phenomena is fine; freedom that somehow floats free of that is
random. And randomness would be functionally impossible.
- a freedom which can't be fully derived from the physically determined chains of cause and effect which would be the only driving forces in a purely material brain.
That’s one of your favourite fallacies – the
argumentum ad consequentiam. Why do you keep making this mistake despite having it explained to you many, many times?
The questions I put to the non believers are: What is conscious perception? How can a conscious entity of perception exist within a purely material object comprising nothing but elementary sub atomic particles? How can any form of consciously driven choice derive from material which can only produce scientifically pre determined reactions to previous events?
First, if you’re attempting an argument in logic what have “non believers” got to do with it?
Second, you’re attempting (yet again) an argument from personal incredulity – another of your various bad arguments. The answers are substantially understood already, but there are still gaps in the data that people from several disciplines are working hard to close. So what?
Third, if you want to posit “God”, “soul” etc do you not think you should at least
attempt to answer the same sorts of questions about them too? What are they exactly, how do they operate, how do they interact with and control “us” etc?
And no, “it’s magic” is not a good answer.
Many people take conscious perception for granted, as if it were a perfectly natural aspect of nature, but it still remains a mystery as to how it works.
Actually it’s a partial mystery, which is why people are working on the problem and – so far at least – there’s no reason at all to think it not to be a natural phenomenon. Gaps in an explanation does not thereby remove the partial explanation we do have from a naturalistic framework.
Blues' favourite explanation of it being an emergent property of material elements does not come near to explaining how conscious perception works.
Oh dear. Emergence as the most likely phenomenological explanation doesn’t claim to explain how “conscious perception works”. What it
does tell us that is that consciousness is
entirely consistent with emergence inasmuch as complexity arises naturally from interacting component parts that individually are less complex than the emergent phenomenon.
Conscious perception needs a recipient of information, but how can a recipient of information be defined by material reactions alone?
You’ve had this nonsense detonated many times now, so why return to it? You’re trying the Cartesian dualism of an immaterial mind interacting with the material body, only you’ve decided to call “mind” in this case “soul”. It’s long since been dismissed for many reasons, not least that the “immaterial” bit is both unnecessary and entirely non-investigable as a conjecture.
Essentially all you have here is, “I don’t understand something, therefore it’s not natural, therefore I can just insert an explanation about which I have no information of any kind”.
Can you really not see how desperately poor your thinking is here?