I am not wrong about God's existence or the reality of human free will.
Logic tells us otherwise.
What I am offering are possible explanations.
None of your 'explanations' have been logically possible, and some of them don't even make sense.
The logic I was referring to was that human free will cannot be defined by physical material reactions.
You seem to be confusing "mindless repetition of baseless assertions" with "sound logic".
Where is this sound logic?And what do I have to do to get you to even acknowledge this point? Obviously you can go on studiously ignoring things you find inconvenient, no matter how often they're repeated (so why you think your own repetition of points that have been already addressed is going to work, is a total mystery).
How about big red letters?
If you could make your version of free will logically self-consistent, then you could NOT rule out a physical explanation without claiming to know everything about the physical world.If we imagine for a moment we could step into a parallel universe in which you were actually capable of logical thought, and further imagine that (for example) you constructed some logic that meant that "the ever present state of conscious awareness" actually meant something (I know I'm asking a lot of suspension of disbelief, but bear with me). Now, how could you possibly deduce that such a state could not arise through some, as yet unknown, physical effect? You'd have to claim to know
literally everything about physics in order to do that. Much greater thinkers than you have suggested exotic physics may be involved in consciousness.
Your whole 'argument' is based on a fundamental confusion between logical impossibility and the limits of the physical world.