Obviously?
Please I invite you to expand on what you deem to be obvious and why.
What is obvious to me is that you have utilised your conscious freedom to guide your thoughts to reach a conclusion which you consciously deem to be obvious. But what puzzles me is that you continue to claim that conscious control of your thoughts is a logical impossibility and that all our thoughts must be pre determined by past events beyond our conscious control before they enter our conscious awareness. So I once more ask how you can give any credence to the conclusions you draw without the ability to consciously verify and validate how you arrived at your conclusions.
More lies and misrepresentation. Great advert for your faith.
You're not at all puzzled, it's been explained to you endless times.
"Conscious control of our thoughts" is still idiotic without further explanation because it implies that we can consciously decide what our next conscious thought will be. You have consistently refused to clarify this.
The extent to which consciousness might be in control of our actions or the overall direction of our contemplation is irrelevant to my argument, and I have not stated a position on it (apart from the obvious point above).
I have also said nothing about the role of consciousness in verification. Again, it doesn't matter to my point.
My argument is against the 'free will' you say we have, i.e. the idea that we could have done differently in
exactly the same situation. It is not about consciousness. It is you who constantly conflates 'conscious control' with the self-contradictory idiocy of that sort of 'free will'
ETA: Of course what was obvious, was simply that no human ability can possibly be evidence for a God. To the extent we don't understand everything about how human minds work, that is just an unknown. Trying to use an unknown to argue for God-magic is an
argument from ignorance fallacy (stupid mistake in reasoning that you could easily learn to avoid if you weren't so afraid/complacent/bone idle).