AB,
Jeez but you can pack a lot of wrong into relatively few words…
But as I have previously pointed out,…
Not that you care about logic, but that’s the fallacy of begging the question. By “point out” what you actually mean is “assert”.
…there can be no controlling factor over physical chains of cause and effect because we have no control over the laws the laws of physics.
At one level of abstraction, that’s right. So?
So there can be no definitive causal event within a chain of physical cause and effect.
That’s called the fallacy of the non sequitur. The conclusion doesn’t follow from the premise (again, not that you care about the logical mistakes to repeat endlessly).
Such logic would mean that every letter I am currently typing was entirely and unavoidably predetermined since the beginning of time.
It’s “determined”, not “predetermined” for the reason you’ve been given countless times and continue to ignore, and at least above the level of quantum randomness (if there is such a thing as “true” randomness) that’s right. So?
The logical principal of cause and effect is derived from observations of physical activity of material elements.
No, it’s “derived” from sound reasoning, confirmed by observation. So?
But it is not universal, because we have quantum events with no discernable prior case.
Yes we do. So far as we can tell, that’s when classical cause and effect breaks down though that understanding may change over time. As you said yourself though in a rare moment of lucidity, “no” and “no discernible” are not necessarily the same thing.
And there is the Big Bang starting event with no discernable prior cause.
That’s probably false – see cosmic microwave background for more information.
Can you presume that the Big Bang was random because it has no discernable prior cause?
No-one presumes that.
Can you presume that every indeterminate quantum event is random because they have no discernable prior cause?
Quantum field events are “assumed” to be random because they do not follow the standard model of cause and effect. Whether they eventually will be found to be “true” random though is currently unknowable. So?
Current scientific knowledge cannot be used to back up any conclusion that human activity is driven entirely by uncontrollable physical reactions or random events.
Absent any other coherent explanation yes it can, but remember that that “uncontrollable” applies at a level of abstraction more profound than the one you seem to be able to grasp of only what’s immediately apparent to you.
There is scope for presuming some events can have a cause emanating from something other than uncontrollable physical reactions to previous events.
Only if you invoke magic, in which case you can presume anything you like as it’s all gibberish.
And this presumption would bring true feasibility to such concepts as choice, manipulation, control or deliberation emanating from the conscious power of human freewill instead of the alternative presumption that they are all an illusion.
Utter bollocks as you know full well because your mistake has been explained to you so many times, even though you continue thoroughly dishonestly to ignore the explanation. Events occur either randomly or because of prior causes. It’s binary. There is no third option. Your way out of that is to assert a “non-material” and claim that logic and evidence don’t hold in this Magicland, but that fails abjectly as a proposition even before it gets its trousers off because you can tell us nothing whatever about this supposed non-material that would indicate that it exists at all.
Epic fail 0/10. See me.
On second thoughts though…