You are still limiting your sense of logic to be defined by what is perceived in the observation of physically controlled material reactions. You perceive that material reactions are predicted and defined by past events, and you extrapolate this to be applicable to all reality - even that which lies beyond our current understanding.
Nonsense. It's a
logical argument (remember
>this<?) that applies to anything that changes over time - which our minds
necessarily do.
You somehow perceive time to be a separate entity which exists in its own right, but time is a property of this material universe.
I don't perceive it as such and I know it is a property of the universe (strictly space-time is but I digress).
Can your deterministic logic be applied to whatever exists outside our material universe where time as we know it ceases to operate?
This is simply irrelevant because a functioning mind
requires time. Specifically choice making, and hence any possible notion of free will, requires time because it requires
change and if there is no time there can be no change.
I put to you the possibility that the human soul exists in an ever present state of conscious awareness and can perceive and interact with the time dimension of our material universe.
Just robotically and thoughtlessly repeating the meaninglessness phrase "ever present state of conscious awareness" is not going to suddenly make it mean something. It's as meaningless as saying "rodsensic yagmop tac" until you provide some logically meaningful (and non-circular) definition.
Of course I cannot claim this to be a fact, but it is an example of thinking...
No, it isn't even thinking - it's making up a meaningless phrase that sounds a bit like it might mean something in an attempt to get you out of hard logic. Thought, at least rational and logic thought, doesn't appear to have been involved at all.
...a physically controlled deterministic system which denies me the freedom to think.
Straw man. Both in the sense of "physically controlled" and in the sense that nobody is arguing that you aren't able to think whatever you want.