Perhaps it would help if you could give a convincing answer to the question:
How do you apply rational thought without conscious control?
FFS Alan, is it against your bizarre religion to read what has been said before attempting a reply?
It's not like it's the first time I've said it. I already pointed you at
#44919 but also see, for example:
#44890,
#44899, and
#44903.
Let's make this clear yet again for those who find reading posts and thinking about what they say a bit of a challenge:
I have no idea what you mean when you say "conscious control". It's basically another gibberish phrase that looks as if it might mean something until it comes into contact with the first feather-light touch of rational thought, on which it collapses into a heap of absurdities, contradictions, circularity, and possible infinite regress.
And no, gibbering on with your other nonsense speak about 'the present' isn't going to help because that is equally meaningless.
This is another case of you apparently being too lazy to be arsed even to take a bit of time to learn about how to make logical arguments. One thing is that
you must properly define your terms. You also threw 'automated processes' into the mix (
#44909) without defining what you meant by it. I could have a better guess at what you meant by that (probably what Penrose failed to prove that minds couldn't be, see
#44921) but it really shouldn't be up to me to be defining your terms.
It's also worth pointing out (for about the ten thousandth time) that
even if you had defined 'conscious control' properly, it would not be up to other people to answer this question, it would be up to you to argue that rational thought would be impossible without it (
burden of proof), yet another really basic principle that you seem too lazy to learn about.
Why not just stop the mindless repetition and start reading and thinking before replying? Is that really too much to ask from somebody who claims to have a doctorate and Mensa membership?