AB,
I can honestly deny this hypothesis because it denies me the consciously driven control I am currently using to compose this reply to your post.
I could explain to you why that’s an
argumentum ad consequentiam fallacy (again) but as you’d just ignore the explanation (again) would there be any point?
By definition, I have no conscious control of my subconscious, so you are wrong to claim it can determine all my consciously driven thoughts.
Your conscious awareness becomes aware of things but it’s logically impossible for it to “control your thoughts” for the reasons that keep being explained to you and that you keep running away from.
And I repeat the simple truth that a consciously verified deduction that "conscious control is a logical impossibility" could never be achieved if this deduction was correct.
Yes it could, and is. Whatever the mechanism for that may me one thing’s clear: it cannot be something that’s logical impossible, which is where you always run out of road.
Magic is an illusion.
Quite, but “it’s magic innit” is the only refuge you have from the logically impossibility of your magic man “outside time and space” notion.
Magical thinking is all you have, but you also tell us that it's illusory. Which horse are you backing here?
My demonstrable ability to consciously compose this reply is no illusion –
But the notion that there’s a logically impossible homunculus “you” at the helm is.
it is a miraculous gift which may well have no logical explanation but it is real.
Miracles are real.
And the blind faith claims to finish. Why do you think blind faith claims would be persuasive to anyone possessed of a functioning intellect?