The whole concept of freedom in relation to human will implies that our freedom to choose is not entirely dictated by past events.
This is just your assertion.
Where is the logic?If it was dictated by the past it would just be inevitable reaction.
So what? How do you know it isn't?
Where is the logic?You imply that the role of conscious awareness is irrelevant, but when considering the concept of human will it is entirely relevant.
You still seem to be struggling with comprehension here. Of course consciousness is important to how humans operate but it isn't
logically connected to the question of causality. There is no
logical reason why a "consciously driven choice" cannot also be a "inevitable reaction".
The main point of disagreement here is about whether we could have done differently without randomness and talking about the role of consciousness is irrelevant to that. Your continued assertions about consciousness are both baseless and irrelevant.
Our conscious awareness will comprise all the influencing factors and possible consequences relating to a choice, but such awareness does not dictate the choice. The role of conscious awareness allows such factors to influence, not dictate.
Why do you think repetition of the same words over and over again will do you any good? It just makes you look dim.
You may well consider the hypothetical scenario of turning back time and trying to imagine how you could possibly have made a different choice under the same circumstances, but we can't role back time in order to test this.
It's a thought experiment Alan, it's about the
logic of the situation, not the practicality of doing it.
The conscious freedom employed to even try to imagine such a scenario is yet more evidence of our consciously driven free will.
Which, even if it weren't just another baseless assertion, is
irrelevant. What is it about that act of imagination that
requires us to have been able to have done otherwise without randomness?
Still waiting for any hint of actual logic or a tiny glimmer of the basic honesty to admit you don't have any.