The problem is that I am trying to answer two slightly differing points of view.
Torridon seems to claim that any conception of freedom to choose is an illusion.
Stranger claims that I have freedom, but this freedom itself is determined.
torridon will have to speak for himself but I see no difference in the detail of what we are saying. If you look at his post
#214 where he says "
And the reality I perceive is that the moment of making a choice is a moment of identifying which of the available options best suits my purpose; and given that I have no control over what values I have, over what my preferences are, over what my hopes and fears are, that feeling of freedom must be in a sense illusory. We cannot choose our values or preferences. How could I choose what values to have except by reference to a system of values ?" - I completely agree with his description of how choices are made - I just wouldn't have chosen to add that the freedom is "in a sense illusory" - although I see what he means.
Now (as I see it) we are both saying that we can choose to do what we like but we cannot choose the way we make that choice because it's made according to our values, desires, hopes, fears and so on (who we are) and we can't choose those.
To me, that makes the choice as free as it is possible to be and your 'alternative' is simply incoherent, illogical, and nonsensical.
But in any case, I have to say that Stranger's idea of determined freedom seems to be a contradiction in terms. Freedom by definition can't be pre determined.
Nonsense: "
freedom The power or right to act, speak, or think as one wants." [my emphasis].
Being 'free' of what you want to do, makes no sense.
The extent to which you exclude influences from a choice, including all the things that make you the person you are and hence inclined to make different decisions from other people, is the extent to which the choice is without any influences, which once again, means random.
The only way to make the choice that you want, without any randomness, is if the choice is
determined by what you want - and what you want is
determined by who you are, which is
determined by your nature, nurture, and lifetime experience.