AB,
Let us stick to facts.
That would help…
My ability to consciously choose and manipulate my own thoughts is a fact.
… and then you fell at the very first hurdle. That’s not a fact at all.
If this were not a fact, my (or your) ability to apply logic to our thought processes would be impossible.
Our concept of logic exists in our conscious awareness, and this logic can only be applied though our ability to manipulate our conscious thoughts. So if your consciously controlled attempt at applying logic comes up with a conclusion that your freedom to think is just a feeling of freedom - your logical processing is flawed. The obvious flaw is in trying to explain all reality in terms of materialistic "cause and effect". The conclusion must be that there is more to reality than material reactions alone.
This is full of logical mistakes that have been explained to you countless times before, only for you to ignore the explanations.
Look, I’m aware that I’m likely wasting my time here but let me try to explain something to you. Forget God. Forget atheism. Forget all of the content of our exchanges, and just focus for a moment on
the process of making an argument.In rhetorical logic we start with axioms. An axiom is a fundamental truth statement that’s unfalsifiable, but must be accepted nonetheless if any argument is to proceed. “I exist” for example is an axiomatic statement – I can’t prove it, but without it nothing can follow.
Once we have our axioms, we proceed next to premises. A premise is a declarative statement that’s either logically true or logically false. That is, it’s
falsifiable. For an argument you need at least two logically sound premises, to which rules of logic can be applied to reach a valid conclusion. Thus for example:
All people are mortal (premise 1).
Alan Burns is a person (premise 2).
Therefore Alan Burns is mortal (conclusion).
If either supporting premise can be falsified though, then the conclusion also falls.
OK, so here’s what you do: you take a premise (eg “the reality of my conscious freedom to choose”, "If the arguments falsify my ability to consciously choose my own thoughts, words and actions, it must be the arguments which are at fault" etc) and treat it
as if it’s axiomatic. It’s not though – it’s just a premise that can readily be falsified. By pretending it’s axiomatic though you just bat away all arguments because axioms aren’t argument-apt, and thus you think your position is protected. It isn’t though. Not even close.
Are you following any of this? If you are, you have two options now: either you can try to engage with the basic structural parts of argument that I’ve just explained to you, or you can retreat to the same muddleheadedness you resort to (“can you not see that in order to compose….” yada yada). It’s up to you. Why not surprise me though and at least
try the former?