he is not interested in your concerns about what it means to him he is asking you not himself..
of course he would that is the point of asking you for your own perspective on the matter.. well duh!
he is simply asking whether you believe yo make choices or not according to your definition not his...
And of what use is that?
Unless he also understands what I mean by "choice" then the answer is meaningless.
by expecting people to agree with your assessment with out proper reason for doing so you are indeed claiming/implying they are idiots for not doing so...
I don't necessarily expect people to.
I welcome any valid criticism of it.
That way a healthy discussion can ensue.
To date there has been no valid criticism.
how many times does one have to offer a contra to your position before you recognize it as a legitimate contra?
You can offer a contra as many times as you want, but it won't necessarily make it legitimate.
You are advocating for legitimacy on the grounds of persistence.
I would very much like to take your contra as legitimate, but then both of us would be wrong.
ie:
explain how the laws of physics as we know them to be, give cause for life to exist in this universe....
It is not relevant.
It would do so through the universal laws being applied to the contents of the universe.
But it is simply not relevant to the argument.
[You can't, yet have the ignorance to go on and claim freewill is an illusion but life is not...and then falsely accuse others for not supporting their position because you can't support your own position.
you fail to see this as a glaring contradiction. why? please explain...
Because I have explained what I mean by "illusion" - i.e. that it goes contrary to the laws of physics.
Life does not.
Life is a pattern of activity that emerges from those laws but in no way contravenes those laws.
Reproduction does not.
Reacting to stimuli does not.
Freewill, however, does.
It requires consciousness to be the initiator of an action and for the initiation to be free of the restrictions imposed upon it by obeying the universal laws.
At some point in the process of a genuine freewill there must be the ability to specify an outcome without interference and despite those universal laws.
It can not be done.
Or at least we can not consider the laws universal if we accept that they can.
It is this requirement to go contrary to those laws, not merely be a pattern emerging from them, that makes freewill illusory (in my view).
It is that freewill appears to go down the one-way street that is those universal laws.
Either we conclude that it really is, and those universal laws are somehow not universal.
Or we conclude that travelling against them is illusory.
If you can not support your position and continue to repeat it, who exactly is guilty of trolling here you or me?
I have supported it.
Every time an effect results from a cause.
Every time an interaction between molecules obeys the laws of physics, chemistry, quantum mechanics etc.
Show and support this claim with one example please.
for unlike you I seek to learn from my experiences.
You seek nothing but to troll, as evidenced by your last sentence.
Plus the evidence in the last 30 pages of your posts.
But you have asked for one:
You criticised me by claiming that I have stated that I would change
evidence to support a conclusion. (Post #595)
One merely needs to read the preceding posts to know that I never mentioned anything of the sort.
That this is a blatant misrepresentation on your part.
Sarkus dealt adequately with your notion of "the significance of 'nothing'" and your criticism of cause and effect.
The rest has generally been you pushing alternative notions rather than direct criticism of the arguments presented (possibly because you have none, but just don't like the conclusion?)
And that has been covered by merely identifying your lack of substance as you try to go from claim to conclusion.