The act of pretending is not compatible with the concept that we could not have made any other choice at the time.
Argument by assertion fallacy. Where's the reasoning? Shameless evasion also noted. I'll ask again:
have you genuinely forgotten all this or are you just pretending to have forgotten?You cannot claim this to be true unless you know what the conscious mind is or how the conscious mind works.
I can, for the reasons stated. A thought takes time and changes the state of mind, a choice is a change of state over time. You simply cannot avoid this. Our minds are not
static, so they must change over time (that's what not being static means).
Are you simply confused by the word 'state'? It just refers to
everything in your mind. That changes (over time), otherwise you'd never think, do, or perceive anything. Think of a giraffe. See? The image of a giraffe appeared in the current conscious state of your mind that wasn't there before. That's a change of state of your mind that happened at a point in time: you weren't thinking about a giraffe, then you were.
Perhaps you'd find the word 'contents' less confusing than 'state' - although it seems slightly less inclusive to me. Regardless, what I mean is
everything about your mind (what your current thought is, your mood, what you're currently perceiving of your environment, and so on) is its state.
...or exists in the same time/space continuum as this material world?
As I said, it
doesn't have to be the
same time dimension but it does need
a time dimension. Of course all the evidence is that it is the same "time/space continuum" but it isn't necessary for the argument - yet again demonstrating that it does not depend on physics or the material world.
You cannot apply this logic to a soul which exists, perceives and acts within what is our ever present state of conscious awareness.
And "ever present state of conscious awareness" is still
meaningless word salad. The '
present' has a colloquial meaning, "the period of time now occurring" or can be taken more literally as a single point in time (although that's somewhat problematic). Neither are in any way logically significant to the argument I presented.