To claim that we could not have chosen differently under the same circumstances effectively denies our ability to choose and replaces it with an inevitable reaction.
Fallacy-fest again.
All this has been pointed out so many time, why don't you even
try to learn anything?
Firstly, this is a
false dilemma fallacy. You have provided not a hint of a reason to think it can't be
both (redefining the word "choose" aside). Even if you did, this would be an
argumentum ad consequentiam fallacy.
What's more, this doesn't answer my actual question:
in what way does anything we do
require that we could have done differently (without randomness)? The whole idea of being able to have done differently without randomness is
nonsensical, so you've first got to turn it into something comprehensible and then say why it is necessary.
Choices are not reactions.
This is not "foot stamping", as you wish to label it.
Until you can provide some supporting reasoning, instead of just the endlessly repeated bare assertions, foot-stamping seems like a perfect description because you are ignoring all the reasoning that has been put to you and just insisting you are right over, and over, and over, and over again - often using exactly the same phrases. There is no evidence of any actual thought being involved beyond "but I'm right, so I can ignore everything everybody else says and just keep on insisting on it".
It is a statement of truth.
See? Just more thought- and reasoning-free foot-stamping.
Where is the logic you claimed to have? Will you have the honesty to admit you can't provide any?