AB,
Basically, the soul makes its own mind up.
First error – the fallacy of reification. What you should have said there was, “Basically,
I believe that the soul makes its own mind up”.
Second error – you’ve just transferred your problem with a materialistic explanation to your non-material one: how could it “make its own mind up” neither deterministically
nor randomly?
As you now know (I hope) what “thought experiment” means, try it here: faced with two identical situations, would this supposed “soul” of yours make the same choice twice (ie, it’s deterministic) or different ones (ie, it’s random)?
I do not know the mechanics of how it interacts with the physical workings of the brain –
That’s a big problem for you then, but not your biggest. Not by a very long chalk.
Before you get there if you wanted your assertions to be taken seriously by someone possessed of a functioning intellect then you’d need to concern yourself
first with questions like why do you think a soul exists at all, what it consists of, how it would be investigated etc. That’s a huge amount of work to do before you need to worry about how it would interact with something else. Just now, you’ve done the equivalent of saying you don’t know how exactly leprechauns get the pots of gold to the ends of rainbows – a potentially fascinating question no doubt, but a highly premature one.
…it may be through quantum events whose cause we can't determine,
No Deepak. Invoking the quantum is a get out of jail free card the religious sometimes attempt when all else has failed, even though they rarely if ever know anything about it.
Doesn’t wash.
…but there is nothing in science or logic which contradicts the possibility of this interaction.
And nor of the interaction of leprechauns, pots of gold and rainbows. Your mistake here is called a category error – the claim “soul” isn’t truth
apt until and unless you can define it and provide a means of investigating the claim. You’re firmly planted in “not even wrong” territory here.
And the evidence of this interaction abounds in the existence of human creativity, imagination, worship, investigation, theorising, discovery, exploration ........
Except as you now know full well that’s not evidence at all. Not even close. What it
is is a just narrative you happen to find persuasive. If you want to call that evidence nonetheless though, then you cannot deny my claim that rainbows are evidence for leprechauns, or that thunder is evidence for Thor.
Can you see the problem here? When you set the bar for the term “evidence” meaninglessly low, you have no choice but to accept claims
for anything else using the same abysmally low standard. Is that really where you want to be?
Really though?
On the plus side, for what it’s worth this is the first time in a very long times that you haven’t just ignored everything that’s been said to you. OK your efforts are logically disastrous, but at least they’re not dishonestly so this time.
Well done!