In several posts in this blog, I've discussed determinism, always from a critical perspective. For example, in a post entitled The debacle of determinism, I mentioned the three devastating attacks suffered by determinism during the 20th century: Heisenberg's uncertainty principle (although it would be better to use the name Heisenberg originally proposed: the indeterminacy principle); chaos theory; and the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics.
Chapter 7 of Kevin Mitchell's book Free Agents, titled, like this post, The future
is not written,
analyzes and refutes determinism. However, it doesn't discuss just one type of
determinism, but three, refuting them one after another in successive chapters.
What are these three types of determinism?
1. Physical predeterminism: the idea that only one possible timeline exists. In other words, that the future is entirely determined by the past; that the entire history of the universe is predetermined from the beginning; that nothing that happens could have happened otherwise.




