It is. I'd summarise, but you've not missed much.
Alan is still confusing his personal incredulity regarding the possibility that the brain could be responsible for consciousness with proof that the brain is not a possible source for consciousness, and he's going round and round in that circle to avoid addressing how the very concept of a will that is founded upon prior events can also be free of those prior events.
O.
Thanks. I had a few thoughts:
Without the spiritual awareness of my human soul I would know nothing.
As someone has stated above, penguins (for example) know things, like which is their mate, but I'm not sure that they are spiritually aware.
I've heard the spirit/soul defined as that part of us that becomes aware that the world doesn't revolve around 'me', there are others out there; it extends to an awareness that the material world is not all that exists. For example, I'm aware that I'm made up of nothing but atoms and molecules reacting with each other, however I am aware of an order in them that is always either increasing or decreasing, but always exists while something is alive. There's also order in the inanimate world, resulting from laws of physics and chemistry.
Whilst matter is evidence for God - how can something come from nothing - order is also evidence - how could order have happened by chance?
When you become conscious of God, then there is the possibility of something else influencing conscious decision making other than just the strongest physical stimulus. That awareness of God might fade as we become engrossed in an activity, or it might be consciously suppressed so that someone will eventually deny God exists.