But my conscious awareness allows me to contemplate reasons before making a consciously driven choice. The reasons alone do not drive my choice.
Yes - but it's the
process of contemplation that we are talking about: how that process arrives at its conclusion. Either your final, consciously contemplated consideration of the reasons makes a final choice for reasons (that may be just the sort of person you are, the state of mind at the time, previous experience, and so on) or, to some extent, for no reason (random).
You keep on trying to exclude yourself from the logic of the situation. It is
how the internal mechanisms of conscious contemplation works that is the point.
I have control over the choice - a control which is not possible if my brain is entirely driven by uncontrollable physically defined events. And this last sentence is entirely relevant to the point I am making which is that there is more to consciously driven choices than physically predefined chains of cause and effect.
This continued insistence just shows you haven't understood what is being said to you. It has
nothing at all to do with the physical.
You have said exactly nothing that excludes a purely physical explanation and the limitations of the physical that you keep harping on about are actually
logical limitations that would have to apply anyway.