What is your opinion on the whole concept of activities?
Are you a determinist or a compatibalist or a free-will-ist or do you have your own concept?
Neither; all.
None of them touch on a whole truth, each are a singular picture of reality. Each as their own virtue.
If you are not a determinist or compatibalist, why can we not do things just by will (such as force ourselves to love, control our heartbeat, or even fly)? If there's no determination, our actions must be determined by our will (and thus not actually determined), if not determined by will, what determines them that keeps the future unset and varied?
OR
If you are a determinist - what do you believe determines us? (God, everything in the universe, other actions, all of the above? etc.,)
The things we do "by will," like control our heartbeat and control our emotions, attribute power to something that doesn't exist. Ego. The idea of a "me" distinct from the universe. Distinct from everything and anything else.
Attributing power to something else--god, or the omniverse--doesn't improve the picture.
Determination exists, but like everything it has its context that gives it distinction, and a perspective that gives it life. Determination/causation is cause following effect. Both "cause" and "effect" are observed. Determination is observation following observation (David Hume), which leads us back to an observer. A consciousness. There is no determination without consciousness.
Free will exists, but like everything it has its context that gives it distinction, and a perspective that gives it life. Free will is action free of an exterior causation, voluntary. Both "freedom" and "causation" are observed. They get attributed to "I" or "me," that's the only difference.
And still, it leads us back to an observer. None of these things happen without consciousness to observe them--oh, sure, we can say they do, but if we buy into that objectivity that allows for that, that's nothing more than extrapolation at best, and a flight of fancy at worst.
So these things are illusive, a picture of reality but not reality. Free will is illusion, but so is determinism (David Hume demonstrated that it is nothing more than inference.)
The middle way is that pictures of reality do exist, and that they are not objective or subjective. The middle way finds the observer not slave to a subjective view point, or at the mercy of an objective one--both are pictures. Things exist; and we cannot say "things exist" if we have no knowledge of them.