AB,
The supporting reason…
Finally, you have a reason! OK, let’s see whether it withstands scrutiny then…
…is based on the fact that we cannot control past events, so if everything we do, think or say is entirely a consequence of past events, we have no personal control.
Aw no, say it ain’t so “Crashes and”, say it ain’t so! That’s not a reason at all, or at least not a cogent one. You’re just making the same old mistake of assuming there to be a separate “we” somehow floating free of the rest of “us” and pulling the strings, rather than accepting the evidence that “we” are actually an integrated, self-aware whole. You’re basically a Cartesian dualist, which would perhaps have been a defensible position back in the 1600s but has long since been abandoned following the findings of multiple disciplines – philosophy, biology, physics, neuroscience etc.
And without personal control of our thought processes, how can we ever consciously contemplate the concept of logic?
Easily, because that “contemplating” is a valid experiential phenomenon that’s good enough as an explanation for practical everyday purposes, but collapses immediately as an explanation for what’s actually going on when you bother to think about. That you refuse to think about it doesn’t change that though.
Human will is not random. Neither is it a reaction. It is what drives the process the process of thinking things through.
“2+2=5", "2+2=5", "2+2=5…”. Repeat endlessly until more capable thinkers give up and go away.
It’s not working though is it, so maybe you need a better plan than just eructating the same total BS?