AB,
I have not ignored it.
Yes you have. I told you where and why you go wrong with logic, and instead of dealing with that you asked whether that explanation could address a different matter entirely. No, explaining why you get everything wrong when you attempt an argument no more explains consciousness than the plans for my house explain the intricacies of Morris dancing.
So why not actually – and finally – address your problem with constructing a logically sound argument?
I have shown the limitations of such explanations.
No you haven’t. If you think that explanations of how logic works have limitations, then don’t attempt fallacious versions of it to justify your claims.
I have pointed out that our freedom to consciously control and direct our thought processes is essential to reach any meaningful conclusions or conduct a sound logical analysis.
No, you’ve asserted it – not “pointed it out” at all. Moreover, that’s a different discussion entirely to whether or not your attempts at using logic always collapse into fallacy. Why not deal with the problem we were actually discussing rather than divert to the conversation you would prefer to have?
You seem to put this view down to my personal incredulity…
More dishonesty. Your personal incredulity as a logically false argument occurs when you try the construction, “I can’t imagine how X works, therefore Y must be the explanation” (when Y incidentally lacks any supporting logic or information at all).
…but it is truly a logical impossibility to perform logical analysis and draw meaningful conclusions without such conscious freedom.
Using the prefix “truly” is not an argument, it’s just an assertion. You’ve had explained to you countless times why your use of “freedom” is logically impossible, yet you return to it as a dog returns to its vomit over and over again without ever addressing the problem of logically impossibility. Why such dishonesty?