The question I asked was how can any form of freedom exist in a world entirely driven by deterministic rules of physical cause and effect. This answer seems to point to some form of restricted freedom and does not really answer the question.
So do you believe any form of freedom exists?
And if so, how does it work.
I look at my potato plants and I am glad that I have more degrees of freedom than them, rooted to the ground, unable to move around. I am glad that I have more degrees of freedom than a reindeer; all it does is graze on tundra all day long just to get enough calories to sustain it whereas I have access to all manner of foody delights. I am glad that I have more degrees of freedom than an orangutan - it might be pretty good at swinging in trees and improvising hammocks, but they can't read Tolstoy or debate on messageboards or start an insurrection like I can. I think what we humans have is the most wonderful thing, we have the most apparent freedom imaginable within a deterministic context, any other scenario would be either worse than what we have or it would be untenable. In a non-deterministic universe none of these things would exist; determinism allows for predictability, it allows for meaning. Total and utter freedom would be meaningless, it would be incomprehensible, it would be unnavigable. What we have is far better, certain degrees of apparent freedom within an overarching context of predictability within which those degrees of freedom are meaningful and valuable and appreciated.