AB,
Let us examine the phrase "could have done differently without randomness" which you insist on using.
Finally! After literally scores of times of asking you’re finally going to have a go at tackling the major problem your assertions have given you. Splendid! OK, let me just open a fresh family pack of Twiglets and crack open a bottle of something insouciant and we’ll get into it then…
First of all there is no question of randomness. Our conscious ability to deduce is certainly not random.
OK, so that leaves just either determined then or something considerably more cogent than “it’s magic innit”/”miraculous”. Can’t wait…
We then consider the viability possibility of our conscious driving force being capable of choosing different paths to reach deductions under the same initial circumstances.
What the actual fuck? Another day and exactly the same mistake? Really? Really really though? You’ve had explained countless times that a “driving force” is just a piece of mindless nonsense you’ve made up, that emergent phenomena arise bottom up and not top down, that…
… oh what’s the point of trying to argue with this level of obduracy?
If a chosen path can take no other path then it becomes an inevitable reaction. So the question I put to you is this: Is it feasible for any valid deduction to be made by a series of inevitable reactions?
Yes. Why wouldn’t it be? Do you remember when I asked you how you’d expect the rationally explained experience of “free” will to feel any different to your (logically impossible) version of it and you just ducked and dived over and over again? Well, it hasn’t gone away – they’d feel just the same so why ditch the rational explanation in favour of the ludicrous assertion version?
My contention is that we must have the freedom to consciously choose our thought paths in order to reach valid conclusions.
And my contention is that leprechauns leave pots of gold at the ends of rainbows. Trouble is though when we make reason- and evidence-denying contentions like these with no supporting arguments of their own anyone possessed of a functioning intellect will rightly conclude that we’re both idiots.
Going back to a point I touched on earlier, there are a considerable number of different interpretations of the New Testament.
Who the hell cares?
One such interpretation is Calvanism,…
And would it kill you to learn to spell “Calvinism” too by the way? As you won’t answer any questions, at least try to spell your nonsense correctly.
…which appears to be chosen in order to condone sin by presuming that we have no control over our tendency to commit sin. This is an example of the freedom to choose our future path in life
As the authors of those books either meant them to be apocryphal or were apparently as ignorant of logic and reason as you are, no it isn’t. What it actually is is an example of simple, folkloric, mythical explanations using the tools available to the writers of the time. What’s your excuse for it now though?
(Sadly folds away the Twiglets, puts the cat out and trudges off to bed... You had me going there for a minute AB – I actually thought you might finally try at least to engage with one of the various problems your claims and assertions give you, but there never was any chance of that at all was there. Was there...)