AB,
Yes, I do fully understand the explanation you are giving.
Okaaay… so does that mean I can expect you honestly to engage with it after all this time?
My contention is that such explanation does not explain the reality of my existence and my mental powers of perception, deduction and interaction.
And that’s a resounding “no” then. “The reality” as you put it is actually just a description of your experience. It’s a description of my experience too if that helps. Very often though descriptions of our experiences fails at an explanatory level – the earth isn’t flat even though I experience it that way; I don’t actually touch the keys in front of me even though I experience it that way; the optical illusion picture isn’t actually moving, even though I experience it that way.
Can you see that descriptions of experiences very often fail if we rely on them for our explanations of reality? That’s what you have – a description of an experience. Your problem though is that it’s
all you have and, as in so many other examples, if you rely just on that type of description for your explanation of reality then you will be – have been in fact – led badly astray.
Your explanation reduces you and I to be just uncontrollable parts of a meaningless, purposeless material universe entirely driven material reactions.
Actually it doesn’t – but in any case you really, really should know by now that fallacious arguments are
wrong arguments. Here you’ve tried an
argumentum ad consequentiam (with a false premise to boot) – a basic error in reasoning.
The fact that we can perceive meaning and purpose in our lives defies such explanation.
No it doesn’t for the reasons I keep explaining and you keep ignoring.
How do you define meaning and purpose within endless chains of uncontrollable reactions?
Now you’re trying another fallacy, the argument from personal incredulity. I don’t need to “define” them – I just need to show that they exist, and that they can do so in a deterministic model of reality – a simple think for you to grasp if, as you claim, you truly do ”fully understand” the argument.
You do not seem to appreciate the truly miraculous powers we have to perceive meaning and purpose in our lives and our consciously driven abilities to manipulate and interact rather than just react in order to endeavour to achieve fulfilment in our earthly lives - and reach our true spiritual home.
Of course I don’t “appreciate” something that may make sense in your head, but has no supporting reasoning or evidence to justify it. I can appreciate the astonishing complexity that’s at play to give rise to the emergent property of consciousness, but the “miraculous powers” etc part is just you collapsing again into your baseline mistakes in reasoning.
Why not try this time to do as I asked – grasp that you have to invalidate the deterministic explanation
first if you want open up a gap for “consciously driven” type assertions to occupy? Currently you’re still putting the cart before the horse – the
a priori argument (for determinism) removes the need for a necessary little man at the controls whereas you start (and finish) with the little man at the controls assertion as though the
a priori argument hadn’t been made to begin with.
Try putting the horse before the cart this time, and then see where that takes you…