I take it as axiomatic that the physical world was created by a source outside of all physical casualty, because I don't accept the coherence of the materialist view of the universe as existing as a brute fact infinitely into the past. Regardless, to take such an in-your-face phenomenon as the ability to make choices and deny its reality for no over reason than to be "consistent" with a particular brand of metaphysical dogma seems to me to be both a violation of Occam's Razor and absurd.The problem with your premise is that if free will originates from something beyond the material world, it still needs to interact with the material world, and such interactions would be visible and measurable in the material world. No such observations have been made to suggest something beyond the material world interacts with it, in a way to suggest souls/spirits exist. So claims about anything that cannot be observed like souls, gods, ghosts, aliens, and big foot should be taken as just claims until actual evidence is provided. The alternative, if you are being fair and unbiased, is to believe every claim about anything, until it is disproven or proven.
I experience volition every day, and I see no compelling reason to deny its reality simply because its reality isn't consistent with materialist assumptions about how the universe supposedly works. Perhaps, rather than dogmatically insisting that a basic experience of consciousness is an illusion, question instead the coherence of a metaphysics that can't take it into account without circularly denying it as an illusion. If volition is an illusion, so is consciousness itself. If that is what you want to believe, fine. But in my opinion such a view is no more intellectually valid than solipsism.
What you believe is irrelevant, a rational person accepts what their reason has lead them to. My reason lead me at first to the existence God (not gods but GOD) and then gradually to the conviction that Catholic Christianity really does hold what it claims to hold, the authentic and exclusive revelation from God. The worship of elemental spirits (in their thousands of guises) has for the most part been defeated. Thus your bogus comparisons are talking points, nothing more. It serves more to sure up your own convictions to yourself and for those you believe like you than it does to actually threaten mine.I can come off as a jerk sometimes and I'm not trying to be a jerk with my next question. How is your belief that Jesus was real and walked on water really any different than an ancient Norseman's belief that Thor threw lightning? From my perspective both are myths. I give as much credence to Jesus as I do Thor or Leprechauns, they all have the same level of credible evidence backing them up.
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