Hi Manuel,
Thanks for a thought-provoking essay. While I am still digesting it, here are some initial thoughts and questions. You wrote:
> Destiny is a theory that events or series of events are all predetermined, i.e., absolute determinism or super-determinism, and since events are moments of physical energy, then fundamentally it is necessary that this theory applies to the laws of physics, as such, physical beings cannot act in violation of the laws of their own physical existence and vice versa.
I take it that your theory is based on the idea that a realistic QM has to be super-deterministic. But there are now several other types of realistic QM (a couple based on quaternionic QM were mentioned in my essay). Have you thought of experiments that would reveal other types?
> After twelve consecutive years, from 2000-2012, the Tempt Destiny experiment obtained empirical evidence that the events of physical reality are predetermined to be certain or uncertain although not exclusively one or the other.
It strikes me that a sample size of 12 is rather small for detecting statistical effects, but I am unsure what was being measured in your test. Have you made an estimate of the significance of the pattern you found? What pattern of outcomes in the football games would convince you that your theory is incorrect?
> In other words, observation or measurement of the effects of selection events alone gives us a false sense of reality.
You make a good point about differentiating effects and causes. Ken Wharton's essay describes what he calls the Independence Fallacy when interpreting QM. Do you see a connection with his argument?
> If we understand that a dichotomy is a division into two mutually exclusive or contradictory entities, then it is also understood that it is necessary that both complementary entities exist simultaneously for either to exist at all.
I am not sure exactly what you mean by "existence" here. For example, a dichotomy exists between finite and infinite. Yet I can imagine finite things existing without assuming that infinite things exist.
> The assumption that selection is some sort of option, a freedom of will, is unsubstantiated by the fact that this machine we call choice is how energy works which is a fundamental necessity, not a philosophical option, of our physical existence.
In my Software Cosmos essay, I describe the simulation paradigm, the idea that the physical world is a simulation resting on a different information world. That means that the laws of the physical world could be deterministic, yet the laws of the deeper world (or worlds) it rests on would not have to be. Perhaps the seat of choice is a world lower than the physical, that the physical emerges from.
Hugh