AB,
It all depends on the basis on which your presumed logic is formed.
No it doesn’t. Either you accept that logically false arguments are wrong arguments, or you don’t. If you don’t though, then you have no defence against any logically false arguments used to justify anything.
If reality contradicts your logical conclusions, the basis of your logic must be flawed.
Wrong again because what you call “reality” here is just your experiential perception of reality. How do you know that what you call reality actually is reality without arguments to justify that claim? Does “the Earth must be flat because that’s the way I experience it” seem like a good argument to you? Why not?
My arguments…
You don’t have arguments, just assertions but ok…
…concern the impossibility of any validated logical conclusions being drawn from a process entirely driven by uncontrollable, physically determined material reactions. For any validated logical thought process to be drawn, it is essential that such thought processes are consciously driven rather than just being a fall out from uncontrollable reactions to past events.
Which is a very bad argument for reasons that have been explained to you countless times here. Your “consciously driven” is just the process of thinking being experienced
as if there’s somehow a magic decision-maker floating free of time and of antecedent events. Just because that’s the way it
feels though though does not mean that that’s the way it
is, especially when the deterministic explanation is the only reason- and evidenced-based one available to us.
The reality is that we are able to form logical conclusions from our consciously driven thought processes. The challenge is to determine the basis on which this reality can exist.
That may be your reality (justified with various false arguments) but you have all your work ahead of you to show it to be
the reality too. Your first step to doing that should be finally attempting at least to rebut the arguments that currently undo you rather than ignoring them and repeating the same mistakes over and over again.
I do not make bad arguments.
Yes you do. Logically false arguments are wrong arguments. Wrong arguments are “bad” arguments. Bad arguments are all you have. QED
I point out the problems involved in trying to force reality to fit in with the limitations of current scientific knowledge.
No you don’t. All you “point out” (ie, make unqualified assertions about) is that for you the way an experience feels must also be its own explanation. When occasionally you attempt an argument to justify that claim you routinely collapse into one or several logical fallacies. Until and unless you finally find the honesty to address the fallacies you commit (and have explained to you) your claims here are worthless.