Does God survive if we have no free will? Thanks for your comment, and yes I appreciate that scientific laws are not deductively valid but the sheer inductive weight of evidence in support of the two laws evidenced, coupled with the fact that it seems inconceivable to imagine how they may be broken, even in principle, leads me to conclude that they are as provable as provable gets in the realm of experience. There is no requirement for the laws to be deductively infallible but rather empirically necessary.
Are you familiar with the Princess of Bohemia's letter written in Response to Descartes, when he posited the existence of a non-extended, causally relevant mind? She argued that in order for anything to interact there must be some shared property through which the interaction might occur i.e. if two things share absolutely no properties then they cannot causally interact. Relating this to the rebuttal you offered; it is logically impossible for a nonphysical thing to affect a physical thing - there isn't a single property they share in virtue of how the two things are defined. Whether or not you agree with the Princess I think is irrelevant - if you cannot conceive of a single way in which the physical might interact with the non-physical, which I don't think you can (just as you cannot imagine a square circle) then it must be said to be logically impossible.
Do you find these responses satisfactory?