How then do you explain human ignorance of all prior choices and experiences of others' choices and experiences bearing down on a person's moment of choice? How do you explain the likelihood a person would make a different, better decision if he or she had more information? Do you believe the more information one has the better decision one makes, or the more information one has the more likely that decision will be the best decision possible?
If
any if these influences are acknowledged, then the individual does NOT have an inherent ability to exert their will and make decisions without external constraints. If any of those questions are answered in any way that has even a hint of determinative influence, then you've just contradicted yourself and if those questions are answered negatively then that evidences a profound lack of understanding about the world.
Humans are bound by time and space. We do not understand all of what has preceded us. Neither do we fully understand all the consequences of any one decision. We do not know what
else our decisions may cause and effect. We do not know all that any one decision has for our future, much less all the consequences any one decision will have on all the other people. Our ignorance of the future is an external constraint. If one single decision would be different if we knew all the future, then that ignorance versus that knowledge is a determinative control. If this is acknowledged then your posts contradict each other and if not, then there's a lack of understanding about the world.
Only God knows past, present and future and has an inherent ability to make decisions without the past and present having any effect on the ability to exert will and make decisions.
Post #66 is deeply flawed. It is, in fact, irrational. I, for one, NEVER let my gas gauge get close to empty

. Pst experience has taught me to avoid circumstances like Post #66 and if I'd unknowingly hit a piece of debri on the highway causing a puncture in my gas tank then all decisions to refill it 1) won't have the desired effect and 2) would be different if I knew of the puncture and wasn't ignorant of the unknown facts. Post #66 is a bad analogy.
You just got done stating an "inherent ability to exert their will and make decisions without external constraints" exists and implied situations bound by a specific list of options" also exist. It cannot be had both ways. It cannot rationally be said there are no constraints on ability and then say constraints exist. That would violate the law of non-contradiction.
It is if it contains multiple options. Let's be clear here. A controlled choice is not a choice. A forced choice is still a choice. A choice, by definition, must contain two or more options any of which can be selected. The necessity of making a decision is forced upon the driver by the empty gas tank but he has multiple options and opportunities to address the circumstances forced upon him. Post #66 is a bad analogy.
No. Hunger or desire would be the state. Ice cream would be the object satisfying the hunger or desire, and the myriads of flavors would be the options from which a selection can be made. Even the multitude of flavors is a constraint because there aren't an infinite number of flavors. Even the multitude of flavors does not inform they buyer of the macro-economics in which a person is engaging, so he has no idea how flavor A or flavor B influence the dairy farmer, the fruit grower, the processing plant, and a large pile of influences that would alternatively liberate or constrain a person's decision when choosing something as simple as ice cream. Some guy made a decision, or failed to make a decision about protecting his chickens and HS Bird Flu infected his birds, leading to an epidemic that spread to the point it compromised poultry stocks and eventually led Tyson's foods just closed down a processing plant that put hundreds of people out of work (40% of them were immigrant of unknown documentation) in a town that greatly relied on that plant's existence. You've heard of the "Butterfly Effect," yes? It's a real thing. Had a small handful of poultry breeders made a different situation none of the ensuing consequences would have occurred. Had they known the effect their respective decision would have on the entire nation's economy they would have made a different decision. Their
ignorance was a constraint. This sort of thing happens every day in every decision of every person's life.
Now both Posts 66
and 71 are bad analogies.