My own perception is that my thought processes go deeper than yours.
In that case:
- Why do you refuse to properly engage with the counterarguments?
- Why the endless repetition of the same things, in the same words, when they've been addressed endless times and you've just ignored the answers?
- Why can't you set out your case logically as you claimed you could?
- Why all the unsupported assertions?
- Why the endless fallacies?
- Why don't you seem to care that you are relying on these well known mistakes in reasoning?
- Why are there so many questions and points that you just ignore?
- Why the staggering double standard of criticising others for not having a complete explanation when you have given only nonsense and contradictory magic?
- Why the obvious distraction tactics and endless misrepresentation?
You edited out most of my post you were replying to. In it I said I couldn't see a single valid step in what seems to be your 'reasoning' and pointed out (not for the first time) some of the mistakes it looks like you've made. So why didn't you put me right, and point out that those weren't your arguments or why they weren't mistakes?
You seem to have a deliberate policy to never fully set out your argument as a series of steps that can be properly assessed. That doesn't suggest somebody who has thought deeply about a subject, but rather somebody who wants to avoid subjecting their ideas to proper scrutiny.
Have you stopped to think just where your freedom to think things out originates?
Even this is sloppy thinking (and/or expression), given your assertions about "freedom". Are you asking me have I thought about why I have an impossible contradictory version of freedom, or are you using the word in its normal sense?
You seem to be obsessed with proclaiming the initial conclusions of your thought processes without considering how your ability to reach such conclusions can possibly take place within the scenario dictated by your initial conclusions.
Which brings us right back to one of the questions that you never answer. What is it,
exactly about human thoughts that
require the ability to have done differently (without randomness)? There is nothing about my conclusion that tells me that I couldn't have reached it within a fully deterministic mind. If you see a contradiction, then, perhaps, after all this time, after so many times of asking, you can
finally produce some logical reasoning? And, remember, this
isn't a question about the role of consciousness, unless and until you've logically established a connection.