Logic or mathematics would not exist without knowledge of the physical world. They are used in an endeavour to make sense of our physical world , to make predictions of physical behaviour and to aid human creativity and design of material entities. Maths and logic are irrevicably intertwined with our perception of the physical world.
Although the initial, primitive concepts, like the natural numbers, originated in the world (although they are now defined in a much more abstract way - built up from set theory and the existence of the empty set), the principles and techniques are applicable way beyond applied mathematics (which is what you're describing) and even in applied mathematics, nothing changed in mathematics or logic when our understanding of the physical world changed drastically, first with relativity, and then with quantum mechanics. The necessary mathematics and logic already existed. Today we can use logic (every mathematical proof is a formal logical argument) to reason about, for example, infinite sets. So we can be certain that continuum infinity is 'bigger' (has a greater cardinality) than countable infinity, despite the fact that neither may actually exist in reality, not to mention even larger infinities than either (an infinite number of them, in fact).
ETA: And, of course, certainly in physics, progress is impossible without
first exploring the 'space' of logical possibilities using mathematics and logic. There was no way to test relativity or quantum mechanics without formulating them mathematically, so they could make exact, numerical predictions that could be tested. Today, the attempts to unite the two theories are being carried out pretty much entirely in the abstract space of mathematical (logical) possibilities. Logic alone will not tell us which hypothesis is right (matches the real world) but the first hint of a logical contradiction or inconsistency will absolutely rule out the associated conjecture.
If your logical deductions fail to match up with reality then you must re examine the premiss on which your deductions are based rather than try to deny the reality in order to fit in with flawed logic.
Yes, it's high time you did just that.
It is my ability to think rather than react to past events over which I have no control which leads me to conclude that your logic is flawed.
This doesn't even match your sentence above. Flawed logic (being
invalid) is different to incorrect premises (being
unsound). What's more, you have given us exactly nothing in the way of reasoning or evidence that would suggest that your ability to think (such as it is) is not, in itself, a (very complicated) reaction to past events (mainly those that shaped you as a person).
All you have is personal incredulity, childish foot-stamping, idiotic claims that your notion of freedom is "demonstrable", when it clearly isn't (
#45007), and equally dimwitted nonsense about people's reasoned arguments being evidence for it (that you so often use to avoid having to think about your own script that doesn't contain any answers to the points raised).
As I have pointed out many times, your notion of 'freedom' and daft phrases like 'conscious control of thought processes' are not only illogical, they don't even match everyday experience, if one does even as small amount of honest introspection. It's not even "the way it seems" except, perhaps, as an assumption that one would make if you've never paused for a moment to think about it, or looked inwards to what is actually going on in your mind.