Kylie
Member
Because you are claiming the OUTCOME of that so-called "choice" is also inevitable.What do you call the operation that inputs multiple options, estimates the likely outcome of choosing each, and then selects the one that seems best? Most people call that "choosing".No it hasn't been demonstrated. It's been stated. Big difference.Actions that are determined have no alternatives, meaning they are entailed, not chosen.
It has already been demonstrated that choosing can be logically viewed as deterministically entailed.
The argument that "deterministically entailed" logically implies "not chosen" fails. It is disproved by the simple, empirical fact of all the restaurant customers actually choosing for themselves what the will order for dinner.
And even your attempt to prove it again does nothing more than assert that the restaurant customers are choosing without actually demonstrating that they are choosing.
You claim it is not "really" choosing because it was inevitable. Why can't it be inevitable that they would really be choosing?
If it was set in stone ages in the past, how can it be the result of a choice made today?