What if we could have been designed such that it was physically impossible? For example, you can't sprout wings and fly. Does that impair your free will?
We might or might not. I honestly don't know. Where we definitely part ways is your contention that certainty of foreknowledge and free will are compatible:
I said earlier in the thread I do not know whether free will exists, but I believe free will is incompatible with the conditions that would allow foreknowledge. Then I was taking issue with your supposition that I would "try to blame God."
Can you be wrong in any moment?
Is everything outside your picture false and/or unreal?
What makes your imagination, which you have in your moment, not also true/real, given your definition?
I'm happy it's unconstitutional, but I don't like the 10th Amendment angle. Just because the people curbing your rights live closer is not any comfort. Human rights should not be subject to state voter whim. IMO, it should be unconstitutional as a violation of the equal protection clause -...
If the future exists in any form, from any perspective, free will left the building. If the choice existed before you, then you aren't the one who made it.
The future already exists in some form in your scenario. If that's the case, I am incapable of acting in any way other than what the existent future holds. This is not free will. It's not your knowledge that hosed free will, but rather the conditions necessary for you to gain that knowledge...