In a materialist scenario...
More misrepresentation.
...what you label as nature, nurture and experience can only exist as pre programmed neural pathways in a material brain, which aptly verifies the analogy to a roller coaster with no means of changing direction.
No, it doesn't. More evidence that you don't understand the argument.
The reality is that knowledge of nature, nurture and past experience will exist in my conscious awareness before I invoke a choice.
More misunderstanding and an
utterly absurd claim. It's not about
knowledge of nature, nurture, and experience, and certainly not in your conscious mind. You haven't
anything like full knowledge of your nature, nurture, and experience. How could you? Your conscious memory (just like everybody else's) is far from complete and very far from fully accurate and that could only ever cover nurture and experience at the concious level, even if it were complete.
The point is that your
whole personality, how you make choices, everything that makes you the person you are, both consciously and subconsciously must have come about through some combination of nature, nurture, and experience because there's nothing else that can have possibly made a difference (regardless of whether we are thinking about an entirely material person or including some non-material soul). If there's some part of you that isn't a result of those things, it must be just random.
Then we have the scenario where you actively contemplate a situation and draw logical conclusions.
And the way in which you do that is because of who you are, which is, in turn, because of nature, nurture, and experience. Have you not even heard of the nature versus nurture debate?
It beggars belief to imagine how any valid logical conclusion can be achieved without any means to consciously direct the thought processes involved.
Another
argument from personal incredulity and also irrelevant. The extent to which conciousness is involved is simply irrelevant to the main point. You think the way you do because of the person you are and the experiences you've had - including what you've learnt or not learned about logic.