Alan,
Your post 49880:
What is in question here is the role of conscious awareness.
Not really. What is in question is what is meant by 'I' in this scenario. Because I consider myself to be basically the result of the functioning of my brain(I have no reason to think otherwise), hence I control my own thoughts.
The materialist view is that conscious awareness somehow emerges from material reactions in your brain - in which case you can only be aware of what has already been predetermined by those reactions. This would apparently rule out the concept of having conscious control of your own thought processes - because you cannot exert control over what has already been determined.
I have no problem with that at all. One idea is that consciousness produces feedback allowing the mind to make constant modifications and adjustments on how it sees the world.
One wonders how any form of rational thinking can take place in such a scenario.
Why?
Your post 49884:
Well at least I have got you to agree that we do interact rather than just react with what we perceive.
I know that this was directed at Blue, but I have always said that the brain interacts both with its parts and with the outside world.
E.G.
"As the processes of the brain are a result of physical reactions and interactions, possibly as a result of the brain's EM field generating neuron firing whilst being generated by neuron firing(a self referencing loop), I see no reason to think that the 'I' isn't basically a product of the brain." From my post 51 from the 'Causes and mechanisms' thread 28th June 2020.
"I would have thought that the overwhelming evidence suggests that thoughts are the result of organised reactions and interactions happening within the brain according to physical laws." From my post 49263 on this thread Jan 8th 2024
Your post 49886:
So in your materialistic scenario where everything which enters your conscious awareness has already been determined -
What precisely is it that determines what is right or wrong, and how can this judgement be verified?
My reaction to that is that morality has a strong evolutionary basis. It aids survival. For me, this is probably driven by such traits as empathy, sympathy, and natural feelings of co-operation and responsibility towards others. Culture, environment, experience, upbringing, and a rational approach superimpose upon those feelings, I suggest. One thing seems clear to me. There is no evidence of some sort of absolute morality stemming from some supernatural source.