There is certainly correlation of active thoughts with measured electrochemical activity in the brain, but what comprises a thought and what invokes a thought are beyond any scientific definition.
If you're saying that we don't
currently fully understand then that's true, but your claims generally go way beyond that and claim that it is impossible to understand in physical terms, which, as I've pointed out, is not something you can do,
even in principle, without claiming to be omniscient.
Correlation does not define causation.
No, it doesn't. The problem is that you have provided not one hint of evidence or reasoning to suggest that anything else is involved. All your 'arguments' are fallacy-ridden disaster zones, and your claims of evidence are nothing short of comical.
All this has been explained to you and you don't even seem to care enough to honesty engage with the arguments or even attempt a counterargument.
Alternatively you can choose to ignore any past experience/ knowledge/ memories and do something just because it is what you want to do because we have the freedom to do so.
Quite apart from the impossibility of ignoring
all of the past (are you going to ignore your knowledge of the English language, or how to walk, or your faith?), you really do need to understand that
nobody is arguing that you can't do anything you want.
It's about
why you want to do one thing rather than another, if you could have wanted something different, and what would be the reason for such differences if they were possible.
These are the questions you never fail to run away from with inane and shallow nonsense like it being 'you' or our 'conscious awareness', as if that actually went any way at all towards answering the questions.
As and aside, it's also perhaps worth noting that the idea of 'conscious awareness'
doing stuff is a bit comical in itself. Awareness is passive and only a part of what makes up a functioning mind.