of course the word physical has everything to do with the flawed logic you keep using, because "physical" implies that something is predetermined by the laws of physics, which are beyond anybody's control.
You aren't even reading and taking in the arguments, let alone thinking (deeply or otherwise) about them, are you? If you were, you'd know my answer to this and be able to answer
that instead of this thought-free, bot-like repetition of the same thing over and over again.
YET AGAIN: Where is the flaw in the logic?
YET AGAIN: If something is not physical it must be
just as (pre)determined as if it were physical unless it has some randomness - that's just logic. This has been explained time and time again and you never answer it or even indicate that you've read it. And no, repeating the bit of your script that says "determined by the spiritual will" (or whatever) is different from "determined by the uncontrollable, physically predetermined..." is not addressing the logic that has been put forward.
But your explanations presume that what we want is predetermined, which effectively removes any freedom we have to choose what we want if the want itself is predetermined, so no freedom at all in your interpretation.
Obviously you didn't even read the rest of my post.
YET AGAIN: According the the dictionary definition of
freedom, you are wrong. Your own definition of freedom is incoherent and self-contradictory.
YET AGAIN: No matter which way you look at it, this is an
argumentum ad consequentiam fallacy which seems to be becoming one of your favourites, alongside personal incredulity.
YET AGAIN: How do you suppose you could choose your wants? By what you want to want? Then how about choosing that? What you want to want to want? I guess you'll just ignore that again...