If the reality we perceive has no feasible physical explanation, then it is justifiable to consider the options of there being a non physical explanation, or that our perceived reality is an illusion.
The perceived reality in question is our freedom to consciously choose to direct our thoughts and actions according to our will. If you consciously deduce that such freedom must be a logical impossibility, then you must presume that the conscious deduction itself was not freely driven from your awareness, but entirely driven by past events beyond your control.
If your perceived freedom to consciously choose to direct your thoughts is a reality, then you must consider the possibility that your presumption of it being a logical impossibility was wrong.
And you must consider whether such deductions are possible without consciously driven freedom to control events in your brain, rather than rely on their being a reaction to past events.
You are setting up a totally false dilemma - and completely ignoring the actual logic of the situation.
No matter how you cut it, "freedom", in the sense of "I could have done differently",
means randomness. In other words, the ability to have done differently
contradicts any possible notion of being able to "consciously choose to direct our thoughts and actions according to our will". In order for you to have a will, it must be for reasons and if those reasons were
exactly the same and you could still have done differently, then your will
means nothing - it must be swayed by total randomness.
No amount of complexity in a material object can take away the fact that an end result will be a reaction to previous events.
Actually this is nonsense. The question of whether the physical world it deterministic is open.
No amount of baseless assertion and idiotic non-logic can change the fact that if something is not a "reaction to previous events", it involves randomness.
Is it feasible for all human works of art and creativity and exploration and investigative abilities to be reactions to past events?
Yes.
And there is another question about the feasibility of such unfathomable complexity being generated from billions of apparently random mutations without any purposeful guidance, other than the concept of a survival filter.
Seriously?
The whole question is not about determined vs random. Our conscious will is not random
It is a question of what determines our will.
For fuck's sake Alan, not again! It is about determin
ism (not being able to have done differently) versus random and, unless you come up with something coherent as a third option, the contradiction stands.
Why can't you at least have the basic honesty to stop trying to twist the language?
If you could have done differently in exactly the same circumstance and state of mind, there can be no reason why, so the difference can only be random.Can an event in your brain be determined from your current state of mind by the power of your conscious will?
Or are all events determined by past events, making them inevitable reactions.
If you mean you meaningless gibberish about a timeless "present", then because it's still meaningless gibberish.
If you accept that the "current state of mind" got there entirely because of past events, you have given no reason at all why it can't be both.
The latter is the only option in any physically driven material scenario.
It's actually the only option in
any self-consistent reality at all - and should you actually manage to find a logically self-consistent alternative, then, unless you are claiming omniscience, that could be "physically driven" too.
We continue to wait in vein for any hint of a meaningful set of premises, that reasonable people would accept, and a logically
valid argument to get you to your conclusion.
You said you had sound logic, were you just lying? Where is it?