AB,
This is the irony:
I am constantly being accused of deliberate actions such as evasion, dishonesty, assertions, ignoring, ... etc. Yet these same accusers tell me that my apparently conscious choices are entirely predetermined by past events. So I ask them, Who or what is ultimately responsible for the deliberation involved in such actions? Could it be that my accusers are the ultimate cause? But then we ask what causes the accusers to make these accusation? And so it goes on, and on, just illustrating the nonsense that in not acknowledging the truth in our freedom to consciously invoke our own choices, there can be no source of deliberation.
That’s not an irony at all for the reason that keeps being explained to you and you keep ignoring remember? At one level we have “free” will and so we treat each other accordingly – in social interactions, in the courts etc. This perception of freedom is a useful construction that allows us to function in the world.
What it
doesn’t do though it tell us anything at all about other types of freedom that sit underneath the apparent one. And that’s your problem: you refuse point blank to do the thinking that would tell you that in fact the freedom you assert is logically impossible – if it isn’t determined then it would have to be random, which would make it chaotic.
Why is this so hard for you to grasp?
It is you who insists on quoting "determined vs random" problem .
Yes, because like it or not that’s the same problem a “soul” would have even though you keep ignoring it.
I have never denied that our choices are determined.
Yes you have. You think there’s something called a “soul” and you think in some entirely unexplained way that it floats free of the basic logic that would require it to act either deterministically or randomly.
That’s your problem.
My contention is that they are not physically predetermined,…
But as you well know because it’s been explained to you countless times adding “physically” doesn’t change alter the
logic that undoes you. If you want to conjure up a non-physical "soul" in the hope that it’ll get you off that hook it’d still face the same options in logic – determined or random. Your option though – essentially “it’s magic” – is hopelss special pleading.
…because if they were, there is no choice.
And there you repeat (yet again) one of your favourite fallacies – the
non sequitur. Of course there’d be choice at the relatively superficial level you experience it, but even if there wouldn’t be that tells you nothing about the underlying reality.
Just remove the "pre-" and you get the third option.
Only if you think “it’s magic innit?” is a third option. Do you?