okay so let me get this straight
in this scenario, we experience Dave's thoughts-emotions-memories-actions-and all choices in life as Dave has done so. AND. We are INCAPABLE of having a single thought that is uniquely ours. All of our thoughts, are Dave's. And they are already set in stone. Nothing can change.
I don't find this to be a good philosophical argument against free will
You have controlled every facet of this argument to create an imaginary scenario where its impossible to have free will by ignoring the complexity of the human brain
Here are things that I find plausible in your scenario
1. our memories are erased. happens all the time!
2. a virtual reality is generated. absolutely - we do so every night
3. we experience someone else's reality. sure why not. what is reality? information being processed by a brain?
but this is the part that you seem to be saying, that I find is not realistic. That Dave's thoughts are ours.
The chip may be running on auto pilot. Constantly feeding information into our brains, making us feel things. Making us say things, or at least believe these are our thoughts and this is what I have said.
But here is the problem. You are saying the brain does nothing but experience input. Therefore we can do nothing but experience Dave's reality as the input is recorded on the chip.
But the brain doesn't just experience input.
Human beings are subjective thinkers. Our subjective brains is what makes us so damn human. It doesn't matter if one half of your brain is screaming "I HATE LIFE!" The other half can still say "Shut up, I don't hate life!" or even "these thoughts aren't mine!". Or even, all three!
Always always always, at any moment in your life you can separate yourself from your own reality - as if its a movie. To seperate our I from our own thoughts.
To be able to sit down, close our eyes, and just listen to our thoughts - as if someone else was speaking them. This phenomenon happens to people when they meditate. That they can experience angry or painful thoughts, as much apart of them as the socks they wear.
1. Just because your memories are taken away from you does not mean you are suddenly incapable of thinking your own thoughts, YOU WILL STILL THINK
2. just because a chip bombards your brain with a virtual reality, even virtual thoughts, does not mean you are still incapable of thinking your own thoughts. YOU WILL STILL THINK
3. the thoughts in that chip aren't true thoughts - they would just be input
4. but your real thoughts AREN'T INPUT, they are output. just the opposite
5. and neither do memories define how you are
what does this mean?
Dave can feel happy when X happens and you can feel pissed. And you will experience both simultaneously. we are complex beings, we can experience multiple things and pass it off as normal
You can live as Dave, even with conflicting thoughts and emotions, and be none the wiser
Now imagine the human brain, capable of separating itself from its own reality. Imagine if the human doesn't like something Dave is doing. Imagine if you are screaming in your head "STOP!" When Dave is saying "GO!" How crazy you will feel, when you begin to feel completely out of control of your thoughts and emotions and actions.
Maybe this is what crazy people feel like, like someone else is operating their body
??how does this chip stop your brain from operating on different wavelengths. from entering deeper states of mind??
not all wavelengths, not all brain functions, not all facets of our consciousness are dictated by input. ever dreamed of something you've never seen before, not even in a movie?
There is nothing about this chip from preventing the deeper states of mind from still occurring. Especially when meditation shows us, we can freely put ourselves in these deeper states of mind. Some states of mind, IGNORE what the rest of the brain is doing. Ever fell asleep in class and woke up when your teacher says something about people rudely falling asleep in class? I know I have. A part of my brain was paying attention, and the other part was in la-la-land. My brain was in two places.
Is it possible for the brain to zone out, even fall asleep while the chip is running? Ever not remember how you drove yourself home? Is it possible to not remember what the hell Dave was doing?
And what will happen if the person does start to day dream, remembers the day dream. wakes up from the day dream, and finds himself as dave in the middle of a conversation that was unbroken by this day dream? since the dave program is completely unable to react to the day dream, wouldn't this chips inability to react to the person's true thoughts the ultimate shattering of reality?
For the sake of your own argument, you can argue
1. that the chip stops your brain from being able to generate its own thoughts 
2. the chip stops your brain from being able to freely place itself in a deeper state of mind where it will zone out and ignore the chip's virtual reality
3. that the chip stops you from even being able to recall a dave memory when dave isn't remembering something, creating a mind chattering time paradox for the person
But you really wouldn't be arguing against free will. Only arguing an imaginary chip can stop your brain from properly functioning.
Now I am not arguing with you that free will is real or an illusion. By all means, argue its an illusion
I am only trying to say, that this specific scenario is ignoring how complex and multi layered the human brain is. And does a better job of displaying how the ego (Dave in this case) isn't you.
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