You really need to come to terms with the fact that there is a difference between predetermined and determined.
They are two different words with different meanings.
We can have no conscious control of what is predetermined.
In a sense you're actually right - but not, I think, in the way you mean. You keep on misrepresenting the argument against you as
predetermined, whereas a mind that is
deterministic would make decisions that are
determined at the time, in response to the situation at hand.
The script of a play means that what the actors say is
predetermined (decided in advance) whereas the moves made by a chess computer are
determined by an algorithm
at the time and in response to the situation. And no, it doesn't matter how the algorithm got there, that's totally beside the point (if you're tempted to go on about the human programmer, think about non-human animal behaviour instead).
If human minds are
deterministic systems, then their choices are
determined (not
predetermined) at the time but that
doesn't mean they could have been different in
exactly the same situation, from
exactly the same staring point.
I'm agnostic about how much consciousness is involved in human choice making but "conscious control" isn't
logically incompatible with minds being deterministic systems.
The freedom I implied in all these examples is simply the fact that we know that we could have made a different choice.
We don't
know any such thing, Alan. That is your
claim - one you have totally failed to back up with any of your supposed "sound logic". As I explained in
#38632, you seem to regard it as a premiss and it's one that those arguing against you
do not accept - at least not unless there is a random element, which you deny.
It's therefore up to you to give us some
actual reasoning to support your claim (and explain how such a difference could be anything other than random) - otherwise it's just your baseless assertion.
The problem appears to be that you've simply failed to do your homework before claiming to have "sound logic". Your background (as a programmer and your MENSA test) suggests that you have the aptitude to understand deductive logic but you seem to have failed to realise that you need to
learn about it too.
It's like if you pass an aptitude test for programming - yes you have the ability but you can't use it until you've actually learned about the principles involved and mastered an actual programming language. You never seem to have taken that step with logical reasoning, which is why you can't construct even a
valid argument, let alone a
sound one and why you keep on falling into well known fallacies.