AB,
You seem to presume that extreme complexity in material behaviour can fully explain how the conscious awareness which emerges from material reactions can have influence on the reactions from which it emerges.
I don’t know what you’re trying to say here, but what I actually “presume” – ie, note – is that:
1. In nature complex phenomena emerge spontaneously from simpler interacting components that separately do not have the characteristics of those phenomena;
and2. You have no argument to exclude consciousness from that model.
Clear now?
Without such power to influence, our conscious awareness can only perceive what has already been determined by past events. So no possibility of the consciously controlled contemplation needed to arrive at verifiable conclusions.
Your terminology is all over the place here, but if you’re trying to say that we can’t control what thoughts we have then yes – that’s right.
Yet every post you make shows ample evidence of your own ability to consciously contemplate what you perceive and draw conclusions.
You’re just repeating your muddleheadedness here. My “every post” is just a manifestation of my conscious mind doing its thing – with no need for an invisible man at the controls to do the thinking for me.
No matter how complex the network of material reactions in a material brain, the end result will always be a reaction determined entirely by the laws of physics. Laws over which we have no control.
Quite possibly, yes. So?
The conscious control needed to contemplate, analyse and draw conclusions can't just be an inevitable reaction to past events.
Why not?
In the materialist view, we have the absurdity of one set of physically controlled reactions (me) being deemed to be wrong by another set of physically controlled reactions (you).
It’s a lot more complex than that, but essentially yes. So?
Can you not see the obvious truth…
Every time you’ve claimed an “obvious truth” previously the claim has turned out to be neither obvious nor true. Let’s see if you do any better this time – perhaps with an actual argument rather than with an unqualified assertion?
…that both you and I are conscious entities, each with our own individual power to think, draw conclusions and seek the truth and purpose behind our existence.
… and no you can’t. Oh well. Yes, each of us are “conscious entities”, and each of us can think etc. The point though is that thinking and drawing conclusions are not as you’d like them to be – indeed cannot be without running into a welter of contradictions – because you cannot grasp the point that the
experience of thinking requires no little man at the controls at all.
Look, try to focus here:
1. In the emergent property model there is no need for third party “controller”;
2. There is no evidence at all that there is a third party “controller”;
and 3. A third party “controller” would have to have a thinking process of its own, so your notion “soul” would just relocate your objections to the naturalistic answer to the supernatural one.
So, and yet again (and without resorting again to the non-argument of “obvious truth”):
WHY do you think it’s a logical impossibility for consciousness to be a single, integrated, emergent property of vastly complex brains consisting of billions of interacting parts that requires no third party “driver” at all?