You appear to deliberately ignore or dismiss the divine revelations of the Christian bible which offer meaning and purpose to our lives on this earth.
I don't ignore them, I have examined them and dismissed them, much I've dismissed similar sentiments from Hinduism and Islam and Judaeism - I've not really examined any others enough to make a similar claim, I'm at the stage where I'm dismissing them on principle. I see nothing in the real world to hold up against those claims and find them believable.
To claim there is no evidence is not true. You are finding reasons to ignore the evidence.
No, there is not evidence. There are claims certainly, but the claims are not supported by anything. Perhaps the claims could be considered evidence, to a degree, but I think that's stretching the definition.
Yes, the evidence obtained from biology and physics do render the notion of free will to be untenable. But the evidence you continue to ignore or dismiss is in the capabilities of the human mind.
Which is examined through the media of biology and physics, and so leads to the understanding that 'free will' does not appear to be viable.
To presume that all human endeavours - (our thoughts, our ability to discern reason, our ability to draw logical conclusions, our creativity, our imagination, our capacity to choose between good and evil ...) can all result of the inevitable fall out from the uncontrollable nature of particle physics alone is also untenable.
To presume so, perhaps. To conclude so, though, based on the available evidence is not only tenable it's unavoidable.
The reality of your demonstrable ability to consciously control your own thoughts offers evidence that you comprise far more than material reactions alone can ever achieve.
Firstly, that 'reality' is not a reality, it's a perception. It 'feels' like we're in control, but we are unreliable narrators of our own existence. Our conscious activity is the superficial awareness of a morass of sub-conscious activity which provides to us thoughts as
fait accompli, which we then try to
post hoc rationalise into a cohesive narrative.
Secondly, no, it doesn't, it offers evidence that complexity has arisen from the interaction of simple elements over extraordinary (to us) amounts of time.
O.