AB,
You imply that there are two levels of abstraction. One in which we perceive our ability to reason and make conscious choices, and a lower level which implies that these perceptions must be illusionary.
At least two and probably more, and they
are "illusory" – necessarily so – as an explanation for what’s also going on under the bonnet because they are inherently irrational. That’s why you conjure up magic to get you off the hook of the binary determined vs random problem, which as even you must dimly suspect is idiotic.
Can you not envisage the possibility that your perceptions of reasoning and choice are real, and that it is your flawed reasoning that leads you to believe that these perceptions are an illusion?
You’ve been corrected on your possible vs probable error many times now, so why repeat it here? I can envisage anything you like, but when it leads to the logical dead end of the perception of “free” choice being actually free (ie, neither determined nor random) then you’re in a world of nonsense.
The fact that you are able to consciously reason is surely evidence that you comprise more than physically driven material reactions can ever achieve?
Only if you don’t think about it. When you
do think about it though, you quickly realise that it’s evidence of no such thing. The only evidence this gives us is that evidence that you’re not a thinking person.
Or an honest one.