What they think was free will, though, ends up being them creating their own fate with self-fulfilling prophecies, which they both recognize at the end and blame who created those fates. Though fiction can offer more boundaries than the real world and prophecies are impossible, free will cannot be exactly proven. Everyone is going to be at some certain place at some certain time, and, though it is impossible to know, it is impossible to avoid. Though prophecies and fates in fiction are much more ridiculous and convenient for the plot, humans’ free wills may indeed not be free wills at all, but are actually stepping stones for fates that no one knows about
What they think was free will, though, ends up being them creating their own fate with self-fulfilling prophecies, which they both recognize at the end and blame who created those fates. Though fiction can offer more boundaries than the real world and prophecies are impossible, free will cannot be exactly proven. Everyone is going to be at some certain place at some certain time, and, though it is impossible to know, it is impossible to avoid. Though prophecies and fates in fiction are much more ridiculous and convenient for the plot, humans’ free wills may indeed not be free wills at all, but are actually stepping stones for fates that no one knows about