I entirely agree that to contemplate this with our limited knowledge of reality will lead to the inevitable conclusion that our freedom to consciously control our own thought processes is a logical impossibility.
Good grief, do you never pay any attention to anything? "Consciously control our own thought processes" leads immediately to an infinite regress, but it
wouldn't matter a jot to the impossibly of your nonsense version of free will
even if it made sense.
There is
no logical connection between the role of consciousness and the impossibility of your self-contradictory notion of free will.
None, zero, zilch, nada, zip, diddly-squat,
nothing.
They are both impossible nonsense, but for
entirely different reasons.
But the fact that we are able to consciously reach such a conclusion defies the conclusion itself. The only conclusion we can have is that we do not know enough about reality to be able to make such a conclusion.
This is just more logic- and thought-free simplistic acceptence of how things subjectively seem. "It
seems this way, therefore it
is this way." We
know that this 'reasoning' is flawed from any number of other examples in which things are just not as they seem.
Another quote from Seth:
"
A conscious intention is as real as a visual experience of colour. Neither corresponds directly to any definite property of the world – there is no ‘real red’ or ‘real blue’ out there, just as there is no spooky free will in here – but they both contribute in important ways to guiding our behaviour..."