It is flawed because you can't seem to acknowledge the existence of your own conscious willpower which can initiate acts of will which are not entirely pre determined by past events.
Me not acknowledging your unsupported assertion is not a flaw in reasoning. I do acknowledge conscious willpower but you have provided no argument to support the view that it cannot be entirely predetermined. Perhaps more importantly, you have provided no alternative to predetermination.
Whenever I point that out, your response has just been to reassert that you can consciously choose what you want to do - which is not what I'm disputing.
Do you get the difference now? I know you can do what you consciously decide to do - I do not dispute it. But that says nothing about whether what you consciously decide to do is predetermined or not.
Our conscious awareness is not just a spectator.
I have never suggested that it might be.
The power to interact at will can't be defined by physical determinism because it is initiated by an event which is free from the constraints of previous physical events...
Yet more evidence that you aren't reading and understanding. YET AGAIN: adding 'physical' makes no difference to the meaning of 'determinism', neither is it relevant to previous events.
Either what you want to do is deterministically derived from previous events or not - being spiritually deterministically derived from previous spiritual events would be just as predetermined as the physical case.
Again, if you think that's wrong - argue against it - don't just mindlessly repeat the same phrases.
...it is spiritually induced from the conscious awareness of the human soul.
Which is just a string of words that define nothing at all. You've basically told us that conscious awareness works by being conscious and aware - with the meaningless 'spiritual' thrown in for good measure.
This is what you need to think about:
If ALL the reasons why you made a choice (all your nature and nurture; all of the person you are, applied to the situation at hand, at one exact point in time) could only have led to one choice, then the choice was deterministic (predetermined by the past). If not; if ALL the reasons could have resulted in a range of choices, then there cannot have been any reason at all for your choice of just one of them - and something that happens for no reason is random.So, you have determinism (possibly) combined with randomness. What is your alternative?