I have already pointed out that conscious choices are determined, not random, so please do not confuse the issue by implying that I am claiming a choice to be free of determinism.
Apologies, I didn't appreciate that.
I agree that the determining factor comes from within the workings of conscious self
But the question is what comprises the "conscious self" and how it works.
The physical vs non physical question is entirely relevant, because we have knowledge of how physical reactions occur and what causes them. But we cannot profess to know the workings of anything non physical if such a thing exists. I am constantly being told that the concept of "physical" is irrelevant, but that is because those who say this are presuming that the non physical must comply with the same time dependent cause and effect scenario as physically determined reactions. Such a presumption cannot be made without knowledge of the workings of the non physical.
Yes and no - there is the open question of the possibility of something else, but you need to make the logical case for it. You can't just posit a 'non-physical, non-random, non-deterministic' effect and expect people to accept it; even if you're making it a hypothesis that awaits validatory evidence, you still need to logically structure it, and that's lacking. If it's not random and it's not deterministic then what's the third option? What else is there? That's not asking for the specifics of the mechanics, it's asking for the logical description of the process; it's either dependent upon what came before or it's independent of what came before, but you appear to be positing something else.
If that's not what you're doing, then I apologise in advance, this isn't an attempt to mischaracterise your view, I'm trying to depict how I understand what you're conveying.
So my contention comes down to the question of how my conscious choices and the reasons for those choices can manifest within the physically defined reactions of a material brain. At the inevitable risk of being accused of personal incredulity again, I venture to say that such conscious choices together with consciously contemplated reasons for those choices are impossible to define by material reactions alone. This is not a question of personal belief, but of the physical impossibility of conscious awareness and conscio0usly driven thoughts to be defined by nothing but physical reactions of material elements.
Whilst my personal feeling is that they are entirely explicable through physical processes, that's not directly impinging on this detail, so we'll leave that for another day if that's OK?
O.