I do not claim to know how the human mind works.
I witness to what the human mind does.
This is simply untrue. You are making baseless and contradictory claims about
how it works.
It has freedom to make choices driven by conscious human will - not by the entirely predetermined reactions which would exist in a physically controlled material brain.
This is just a baseless assertion about how human choice works. You have established
no logical connection whatsoever between what we experience and this assertion.
And once again you are dishonesty misrepresenting the
logical argument against you as being to do with the physical brain.
My contention is in what comprises this human will which is accountable for choosing our thoughts, words and actions.
It is, but this is
not the same thing as your silly and contradictory assertions about how it works.
You are in denial of the possibility that human will is capable of generating a definitive cause from its conscious state.
That's because it's nonsensical gibberish.
The conscious state being an awareness of past events, present events and possible future consequences. From this awareness, the mind has freedom to choose a course of action. This is the reality.
Once again, there is nothing particularly wrong with this description but there is no logical link between this and
how the choice is actually resolved, and it is
logically impossible for it to be resolved in a way that is both not fully defined by its antecedents and involves no randomness. That isn't something we experience, it isn't obvious and it isn't demonstrable - it's nonsensical and impossible.
Just to summerise: there is
massive hole in what passes for your 'reasoning' that takes us from "we consciously think about stuff and decide" to "our choices are not entirely the result of cause and effect (and involve no randomness)".
Why does the one imply the other - where is the reasoning?