And round, and round, and round we go....
In essence, anything which emerges from material reactions...
Misrepresentation of the
logical impossibility of your alternative.
...will be entirely defined by those reactions. In turn, these reactions will be defined by the laws of particle physics. So in a materialistic scenario, there can be no conscious control over the laws of physics, so no conscious control over whatever emerges from material reactions.
It is a direct experience and a logical necessity that we have no concious control over what enters our conscious mind next, regardless. You can't consciously think about what your next conscious thought will be, that's an absurd infinite regress.
Our conscious awareness can only perceive what has already been determined by the material reactions from which our conscious awareness emerges.
Gibberish.
Yet we have the ability and motive to consciously contemplate whatever we perceive through our conscious awareness and guide our thought processes to reach meaningful conclusions.
More gibberish. We can decide to think about whatever we
want to think about, but we can't just decide to have a great idea, or when something new will occur to us. It doesn't look like you've had any new thought on this subject for decades, not even on how to phrase it differently.
If our conscious awareness is nothing more than a spectator of what emerges from material reactions...
Nobody knows what role consciousness plays (another misrepresentation), and it's still
totally irrelevant to the impossibility of your version of freedom.
...there can be no possibility for consciously driven interaction to drive the contemplation and guiding process of our thoughts.
As I said, we
can decide to think about whatever we
want to. We can also organise our ideas and examine them to see if, for example, they follow a logical path or one full of assumption, incredulity, and fallacies. If we don't know how to do that, we can decide to learn how to.
It's about time you tried it.
I am fully aware that both you and I have the ability to consciously drive our thought processes...
This really doesn't mean very much, and to the extent it does (see above), it's totally irrelevant.
...to reach what we both believe to be valid conclusions - even though our conclusions may differ, the process of reaching and validating these conclusions can't be determined by the end result of reactions beyond our conscious control.
More misrepresentation and a baseless assertion.