You are effectively relegating our conscious awareness to be just a spectator of what has already been done before we know anything about it.
At the risk of yet again being accused of personal incredulity, and the "ad pop" argument, I have to say that this would be regarded as a load of b****cks by the vast majority of the human population.
For once perhaps, I'd agree with all of that. I don't doubt that most people would find the implications of brain research counter-intuitive and unsettling; most people on the planet alive today are still running around with some or other pre-Darwinian conceptualisation of what they are, and that is 150 years behind the curve already as far as science is concerned. Most advances in science are counter -intuitive at first; how many people get their head round time running at different speed in different places ? And even that insight is 100 years old now. Things is, to get from day to day in life, we don't need to understand such things, so it doesn't even touch on most people's lives; it's not important.
But none of that renders it untrue; in fact it does make sense in the broader contexts of what we have come to understand through science. That batsman swinging his bat, well yes, it is something we take for granted, we don't stop to think how awesome a thing is happening there that he can do all those equations of motion so effortlessly without even
thinking about it. That suggests that we are the inheritors of mental skills forged in ancient times where our ancestors very survival depended on being able to calculate such things and act on insight as quickly as possible. In the arms races of perception and cognition, predators needed to identify resources and pounce, prey needed to identify threats and take evasive action as quickly as possible. To survive intense competition, the individuals that could summon executive action at the earliest point in the perception cycle would survive, others would get eaten or starve. The ability to act on preconscious perception has been honed through the principal of survival of the fittest. Countless billions of creatures before us have struggled in the dramas of life and death such that we live our lives now endowed with mental abilities so sublimely honed that we have been traditionally inclined to imagine some divine magic must be responsible. That we make choices and act on preconscious perceptions, absolutely makes sense, in the bigger picture. That batsman owes an awful lot to those that have gone before.