The mind with a sense of absolute freedom would find itself in a state of absolute captivity. For instance if I were asked to do wherever I liked and absolutely assured of the fact I could in fact do whatever I desired, I believe I would be completely spellbound, and virtually unable to do anything at all, and thus unable to make up my mind I will remain suspended in a state of inaction for until I would see a good reason of doing of just one things out of countless others. I would then have realised the futility of action, or ineffectuality of my doing, when completely deprived of my morally reasonable standpoint.
I can choose any object to build the case for the grandest of all arguments, you say. Then may be you are not aware of the very fact I have no choice – to have infinite choices is the same as having no choice at all, in my view at least. Now, since I have proved, again at least to myself, that given the situation I have no other choice but a choice of my own. I therefore choose myself as that ’anything in the natural world that has design’ and therefore a reason itself in the argument in favour of the existence God.
Do I need to say more? I think therefore I am, but what am I? I am not certain, even though I am certain that I am, I am not certain about all the question that are appended to my knowledge of my being. If I cannot deny with all my knowledge the fact of my own humble existence then how can I with all my knowledge I can deny what is so believable in the mind. I can ether say that there is God, or I stay quite!