I'm completely familiar with the words I am using and the underlying logic.
1) You keep referring to "free will" as made up of two words after you mistakenly confused the OED with some online Oxford dictionary and still missed the fact that your own source defined
as a noun. NOT as an adjective plus a noun.
2) If you are familiar with the logic you are using, then express it: formally. I don't care which formal system you use so long as it is a formal system
Which is why I know that discussions of physics and philosophy is a red herring (would you like that in Latin as a logical fallacy)
I don't care if you use
non tertium datur or refer to the excluded middle, it's your basic failure to understand logic or language that matters.
Physics is central to determinism. It's why we have the word and why it didn't exist before the 19th century:
For dates and uses see the
real OED entry:
"1. The philosophical doctrine that human action is not free but necessarily determined by motives, which are regarded as
external forces acting upon the will.
1846 W. Hamilton in T. Reid Wks. 87 (note) ,
There are two schemes of Necessity—the Necessitation by efficient—the Necessitation by final causes. The former is brute or blind Fate; the latter rational Determinism.
1851 H. L. Mansel Prolegomena Logica App. 303 The latter hypothesis is Determinism, a necessity no less rigid than fatalism.
1855 W. Thomson in Oxf. Ess. 181 The theory of Determinism, in which the will is regarded as determined or swayed to a particular course by
external inducements and formed habits, so that the consciousness of freedom rests chiefly upon an oblivion of the antecedents to our choice.
1866 Contemp. Rev. 1 465 He arrived at a system of absolute determinism, which entirely takes away man's free will, and with it his responsibility.
1880 W. L. Courtney in Abbot Hellenica (1880) 257 Epicurus..was an opponent of Fatalism, not of Determinism.
2. gen. The doctrine that everything that happens is determined by a
necessary chain of causation.
1876 Martineau Materialism 71 If man is only a sample of the universal determinism.
1944 G. Bateson in J. McV. Hunt Personality & Behavior Disorders II. xxiii. 714 The phrase ‘economic determinism’ has..become a slogan.
1944 G. Bateson in J. McV. Hunt Personality & Behavior Disorders II. xxiii. 716 It is this sort of cultural ‘genetics’ and cultural ‘physiology’ which I have tried to sum up with the phrase ‘cultural determinism’.
1945 K. R. Popper Open Society II. xxii. 196 Sociological determinism [is the view that]..all our opinions..depend upon society and its historical state.
1950 C. D. Darlington in Darlington & Mather Genes, Plants & People p. xvii, Mendel directed his enquiries with a rigorous determinism. He assumed that every property of every seedling was determined by something that happened in its two parents.
1957 N. Frye Anat. Crit. 6 The fallacy of what in history is called determinism, where a scholar with a special interest in geography or economics expresses that interest by the rhetorical device of putting his favorite subject into a causal relationship with whatever interests him less."
FF
Proof by repeated assertion?
No, I gave you the reasons. You just quoted the part where I introduced them and then failed to address them.
And if that "free will" (your special definition) is deterministic, then it is not free.
My special definition? I never gave my definition except insofar as I said it was a construction (prefab, phrasal noun, etc.; it doesn't matter your own failure to recognize the difference between the OED and your little online dictionary pales in comparison to the fact that you defeated yourself as your source likewise defines it as
a noun.)
Nor did I ever say "free will" was deterministic. I simply showed that your understanding of determinism itself is so utterly at odds with the term (which you've confused with fatalism) that your argument precludes it excepting where you allow for determining factors in which case your argument is self-defeating (for the reasons I stated).
And if that "free will" (your special definition) is not deterministic, then it is random.
ML random? Over what interval? Stop using words when you don't understand them or the basics such that you are regurgitating arguments from Aristotle, just with less logic, more confused, and worthless.
Your argument is an expression of fatalism you've conflated with determinism. It's a confused mixture of different notions about the reasons for which things happens with fancy words you don't know much about.
If something can only happen one way or is random, then either it can happen only one way because the universe is deterministic (in which case your argument requires incorporating causality) or it doesn't, in which case we're dealing with fatalism and your argument renders determinism moot.
You haven't incorporated causality into your argument, and thus either you aren't arguing determinism or you are assuming it as a premise.