AB,
It’s a trivially easy matter to falsify this latest cornucopia of fallacious reasoning, unqualified assertion and juvenilia but what though would be the point? We both know that no matter how comprehensively your efforts are dismantled you’ll just ignore the rebuttals I’ve taken the time to set out, and then make exactly the same mistakes in reasoning later on.
I tell you what. Why don’t I do it again, only this time you finally muster up the decency in return to try at least to address the rebuttals rather than just pretend they hadn’t happened. Fair enough?
Right then…
If the only acceptable evidence is limited to that of material behaviour, your conclusions are inevitable.
And you open with the fallacy of the straw man. The only acceptable evidence
isn’t “limited to that of material behaviour” at all – the only acceptable evidence is that
which satisfies the basic necessities of being evidence at all. That is, the facts or information must validate the conclusion. Just claiming, “X is really complicated, therefore its evidence for god” (which is all you have) is an abuse of the term “evidence”. I may as well claim the rainbows are “evidence” for leprechauns, or that fog in the Scottish Highlands is “evidence” for the reappearance of Brigadoon.
If you think you have evidence for “God” then by all means (finally) set it out, but so far at least your attempts have so fundamentally abused and corrupted that term as to render it meaningless.
Your consistent refusal to acknowledge that the capabilities of the human mind offer substantial evidence of something more than material reactions can ever achieve is inevitably leading you to draw false conclusions which contradict the reality of your own abilities.
My consistent refusal to do that is exactly justified for the reason I just explained to you and that you, finally, will now try at least to address won't you. You cannot accuse me of reaching false conclusions until and unless you finally manage to show why the rebuttals you’re given to the justifications you attempt for your conclusions are wrong. You can guess at any conclusions you like, but you cannot expect your guesses to be taken seriously until you finally tackle the problem of your justifications for them being a logical train wreck.
I have no doubt that you will try to dismiss this argument as personal incredulity,…
In the absence of any coherent arguments at all you essay the argument from personal incredulity a lot, but not so far…
…but there is nothing personal in the logical deduction that chains of uncontrollable physical reactions alone are incapable generating complex trains of thought which lead to consciously verifiable conclusions.
That’s called argument by assertion – (yet) another fallacy. What “logical deduction” do you think you’ve made, rather than just asserted to be the case? I’m aware of no arguments at all (and certainly none provided by you) that would support your unqualified assertion, but I am aware of the basic principle of emergence that describes how complex phenomena arise spontaneously from less complex constituent parts. This model fits perfectly well as a likely explanation for consciousness – if you think it doesn’t though, then after all this time why not tell us what your “logical deduction” to the contrary entails rather than just claim to have it, but always keep it a secret?
Also…
You can’t have an “also” when everything hitherto has just collapsed in a welter of error, fallacy and blind faith but ok…
… these limitations on the only acceptable evidence being material behaviour leads to the inevitable conclusion that a single entity of conscious awareness must be something which emerges from material reactions. But in this you refuse to acknowledge the impossibility of many discrete reactions being able to generate a single point of awareness.
Again, you’re committing the argument by assertion fallacy. If you think that’s impossible then why not after all these, what, thousands? of repeated assertions with no qualifying arguments at all finally tell us how you propose to justify that assertion of impossibility?
You also seem to have a pre defined opinion that anyone who claims to have witnessed a truly miraculous event in their lives must be either deluded or lying regardless of the evidence.
Or, in your case, entirely unable to explain how you eliminated the various non-miraculous (but less solipsistically thrilling) possible explanations rather than jumped straight to “that’s a miracle then” with no connecting logic at all. Of course you could show me to be wrong about that by explaining how the other explanations were impossible (or at least less likely than the miraculous one) but as that seems not to have troubled you in the first place, I doubt you’ll be able to explain to someone else right?
There must come a point at which you must concede that our lives are more than just a roller coaster ride along a physically defined path from which there is no escape.
In principle that point would be when you or someone else could produce an argument to believe that that isn’t a dog’s breakfast of mindless assertion, blind faith, wishful thinking and logical car crashes. So far, that’s all you have but I now have high hopes that as I’ve taken the trouble to correct you multiple times once again you’ll finally muster up the decency to step up the plate and attempt at least some honest-to-goodness counter-arguments of your own.
You will now try at least to do that won’t you?
Won’t you?