AB,
I am not talking about absence of evidence.
Yes you are. When I’ve asked you WHY you believe the unqualified assertions you make (“god”, “soul” etc) to be true you either ignore the question or – at best – you tell me it’s because you don’t find the materialistic explanations such as they are convincing. Regardless of whether or not that’s the case, I therefore explain to you that the (supposed) absence of evidence for the materialist model does
not thereby provide supporting evidence
for your supernatural conjectures.
It’s a simple matter of logic, and it holds true for any competing explanatory models. The absence of scientific knowledge about thunder for example did not justify their alternative claim “Thor”. I’ve tried to get you to tell me whether or not you understand this, so far without success. If by some chance you do understand it though, then you should know never again to try “because I don’t find the materialist explanation convincing” when asked what justification you have for your claims.
Claims about “god”, “soul” etc must be justified on their own merits,
not on the demerits of alternative explanations.
Are you clear about this now?
I am highlighting the impossibility for consciously controlled reasoning to emerge from a material brain entirely driven by physically controlled reactions over which we have no conscious control - we do not control the laws of physics.
Now you’re shifting ground. If you want to assert that a materialistic model of consciousness is impossible (no matter what evidence materialism may provide to the contrary) then you have all your work ahead of you to explain WHY you think it to be impossible. Just asserting it to be so isn’t an argument – it’s just another unqualified assertion.
You can't escape from this by simply claiming the working of the brain to be complex.
Escape what? You haven’t argued for anything yet.
No amount of physically driven complexity will allow conscious control.
You’re starting from the wrong place again. If you want “conscious control” as you mean it to be your premise, then you need
first to demonstrate its existence – something you’ve never even attempted so far as I recall, not least presumably because of the insurmountable contradictions it gives you.
You keep referring to the explanations which you deem to falsify my reasoning - but your capability to come up with such explanations are themselves evidence of the reasoning you are trying to falsify.
And as a dog returns to its vomit, so you return to the same error in thinking over and over again. The arguments you’re given (but won’t or can’t address)
precede and falsify assertions about needing “conscious control” as you put it. You have to deal with those arguments therefore
before you can make a case for this supposed conscious control. Just repeating endlessly “you’ve made an argument, therefore conscious control” like a broken speak your weight machine is just circular reasoning – yet another of the fallacies into which you routinely collapse.
Look, why not just for once try at least to deal with the
a priori arguments for why you don’t (indeed
can't) have the conscious control you think you have, rather than ignore them, assume that you do have the conscious control you think you have, and then use that assumption to throw at the arguments that have already falsified it?
What is it that stops you – fear? Incomprehension? Dishonesty? What?