Can you fully define what comprises conscious thought?
If not, how can you possibly lay claim to know what determines a thought?
I don't claim to know what determines it, but if it is not fully determined by whatever led to it, then, to the extent that it isn't so determined, it must be determined by nothing, and therefore random.
This is not a complicated argument. You've had it explained many times and by several people and you've never been able to point out what is wrong with it. You just resort to incredulity and baseless assertions that it is "flawed" or "shortsighted".
Can you not tell the difference between a lie and a genuine disagreement?
Because the disagreement is about how our experience of conscious thought and choice making comes about, and nobody is denying those things. Everybody who attempts to explain them is attempting to explain the same things. Claiming those things as evidence for your idea alone is lying about what other people are claiming.
A genuine and honest disagreement would acknowledge that you can't claim the phenomena we are all attempting to explain as evidence for your own explanation.
You are like somebody with a new theory of gravity trying to claim that the evidence for it, and against all the other theories, is that things fall towards the ground.
I have never claimed that there is no randomness.
What I have claimed is that conscious choices are not random.
If they were, choosing whether to overtake on a busy road could soon wipe out much of our population.
Since the whole subject of this debate is conscious choices, why on earth would you think I was claiming that you said no randomness about anything else?
I'm not saying that there is significant randomness either, but the implication of your claim that choices are not fully determined by the reasons for them, is that they involve randomness.
FFS, you keep claiming you are understanding what is said to you, so why do I need to go over this time and time again when you post things like this that strongly suggest you've been paying no attention whatsoever?
I have never claimed a choice can be made for no reason.
Did you even read the quote you put this under?
To the extent something is not
entirely determined by the (existing) reasons for it, it is for no reason - which means random.
And no, you can't just magic a reason into existence in "the present" (which you still haven't said what you mean by in any logically significant way) because the reason itself would have to either be due to prior reasons or random.
I claim that for it to be a genuine choice, it can't be predefined by physically predetermined reactions alone - otherwise it is not a choice because it is an inevitable reaction.
Now the pointless mantra about the "physical", which is (as different people have explained many times)
totally irrelevant to the logic.
Please stop misquoting what I have posted.
I didn't. How about you actually paying some attention to what is said to you?