AB,
The fact that it is force fields which make contact rather than atomic particles is totally irrelevant.
No no no no no – you’ve lost the plot again here. Try –
really try – just to focus on the basic question you’re actually being asked: can you see now that sometimes “obvious” truths can turn out not to be not robust and that different, reason- and evidence-based truths can be more robust
even though they may be less intuitively obvious?
That’s all you’re being asked to consider for now. The answer is either yes or no.
Which is it?
Who cares how the finger makes contact - the simple truth is that it is the movement of the finger which causes the key to be depressed. What is important is the cause and the result.
Actually
how a phenomenon happens
is the whole point. Computer keys get depressed but the colloquial explanation for
how that happens is wrong; decision-making happens, but the colloquial explanation for
how that happens is wrong. The “how” here is
everything.
Try to remember this.
These are the important questions to consider:
What causes (drives) our thought patterns?
Does our conscious awareness have any input to the cause?
What verifies the conclusions we come to?
Not they’re not. Even if the current reason- and evidence-based answers to these questions were found to be incomplete or wrong, that would provide no more justification for your claim “soul” than (to quote Ben Goldacre) finding flaws in aeroplane design would justify the claim “flying carpets”.
So, yet again stop evading and just try to answer the simple question you’ve actually been asked: can you see now how sometimes intuitively obvious answers to
how something happens can be less robust than counter-intuitive, non-obvious and different answers to the same questions – for example with fingers not touching the keys?
Can you see that now – yes or no?