AB,
You still do not seem to grasp that an entity with the power to exert control does not need another controller.
But you’re the one asserting the humans cannot make decisions unaided, so a magic man called a “soul” must be at the controls to pull the strings. Using your own assertion about that, why then would the magic soul not need a separate magic soul of his own to pull his strings, and so on forever?
Without the power to control your thought processes how can you possibly give credence to whatever drops out from your uncontrollable sub conscious brain activity?
Because that’s all that any logically cogent deduction of what’s actually happening permits. You’re also trying an
argmentum ad consequentiam fallacy here by the way.
No.
I offer a valid response which you choose to find reasons to reject.
Again, no you don’t. “Reject” and “falsify” are
not the same thing. What I do is the latter, which is when you always run away from the problem your false reasoning has given you.
I think you did not fully grasp what I said - "We cannot use our thoughts to change the truth"
I think i grasp it better you do, which is why I know it’s idiotic. It’s “our thoughts” that
construct our models of what truths might be. Truths aren’t just lying around like pebbles to be picked up – they’re human constructions, our interpretations of the observable universe. That’s why what we might think to be true on a Monday might well be different on a Tuesday.
I continue to witness to what I honestly believe to be true - not what I want to be true
That fallacy is called a
non sequitur. What can’t they be both – why can’t you honestly believe to be true only what you want to be true?
I do not ignore your falsifications - I disagree with them for valid reasons which I offer, but which you refuse to accept.
Can you think of one example of you rebutting a falsification I’ve given you with an actual counter-argument of your own rather than with just a repetition of your initial mistake? Just one will do.
You cannot know for certain that your experience of conscious control and freedom to choose are illusions (or "just the way it seems")
You cannot know for certain that the life, death and resurrection of Jesus were not based on historical facts
You cannot know for certain that all miracles claimed in Jesus name were false.
You cannot know for certain that the finely tuned parameters in this universe were not intended to bring about the formation of stars and planets
You cannot know for certain that all personal witness stories about miraculous conversions were false.
You cannot know for certain that leprechauns don’t leave pots of gold at the ends of rainbows either. What you’ve done here (five times) is attempted a basic fallacy called shifting the burden of proof.
You’re the one making the positive claims about these matters, so it’s
your job to
justify those claims. Just telling me effectively "nothing's impossible" instead doesn't even come close to doing that.
Can you begin to see here finally the difference between a rejection (which is what you did with a logical fallacy) and a falsification (which is what I did by explaining to you where you went wrong again)?
You cannot deny that intelligent design does exist in this universe in the form of human creativity.
Of course I can. What causal relationship do you think there is between those two things?
You cannot presume that all our human thoughts, words and actions can be derived entirely from unavoidable material reactions unless you know what comprises our conscious thoughts and how they work - in particular what drives them.
But you can deduce it on the basis of the available reason and evidence, and in any case that’s not my problem. You’re the one asserting it to be “totally impossible” – rather than rely on the fallacy of shifting the burden or proof again, why not then finally attempt a justifying argument to support your assertion?
See above.
Seen and rebutted. Comprehensively.