Not at all. No. Can I be more clear?Terrapin Station wrote: ↑Sun Jul 04, 2021 5:51 pm ...it's about A being able to cause only one possible outcome...
It's about whether or not we, as individuals, have any causal power of our own, some causal power not merely explicable in terms of pre-existing physical causes. That's what "free will" means: not "multiple possible outcome," but rather "ability to make something happen, using volition."
To illustrate, if I go to the casino and play roulette, I have many, many possible outcomes on the wheel. But I am not at all in control of where the ball lands. I'm still powerless: I cannot "cause" the ball to land on any particular outcome at all, at any particular time. The randomness of the wheel does not empower me; rather, it's a further reason my volition cannot make the ball do anything.
I just did.So can you answer now?
Your supposition contains a fallacy. I do not agree with the postulate that "outcome" is the hallmark of Determinism: I insist that "causality," the having of one's own power-to-cause is its hallmark. If there's one possible outcome or many, I still have no "free will" if I cannot cause or influence the outcome by means of my choices.
Your move.