Yes. If someone built a robotic arm that "threw" two dice the same way consistently it would prove dice control.
If two dice were set the same way every time and thrown to the same spot on the table every time and hit the back wall the same way every time you would have control. Only the dice set would have to be changed to attain the desired number.
A robotic arm would prove DC and DI are possible.
Unfortunately no human can duplicate the exact same toss like a robotic arm. So the best we humans can do is try to minimize the movement of the dice.
Minimizing movement means influencing the dice as much as possible. So we try for soft throws at the same angle while trying to reach the back wall hitting under the pyramids in the center where the wall is flat.
We can never attain the perfection of a robotic arm but we can try.
First rule is try to limit the rotation of the dice and the speed and angle of the throw. Second rule is to hit the back wall in the space under the pyramids. Then hope for luck.
But I am sure you will see that the harder you work at controlling the throw the luckier you will be with the results.
And remember no one said you have to hit the pyramids.