Sorry to have to do this but you'll need to provide the definition you want us to use for "freewill" in your question - over the years I've learnt that people often have slightly or even very different definitions to one another.
Is it possible for both of the following statements to be true about one person, Bob:
1. Every single thing Bob does in his entire life was already inevitable even before he was born.
2. Bob has free will
Since the whole point of the poll is to explore the different ways that people understand "free will" it wouldn't make sense to provide a definition.
Sorry, that didn't come across to me from your poll and opening post.
Wouldn't it be better to simply ask "what does free will mean to you?", whether someone answers with a yes or no won't provide any information on the definition someone is using to answer your question.
Just for myself I could answer yes or no depending on what definition and meaning I was using as I don't think freewill has a single definition.
My overall view is that the phrase is a folk language holdover, like say the word sunrise, yes it describes something but that something is not what the folk language baggage assumed it was.
You could always just give your answer to the poll, and then explain in the comments what definition you used and how it informed your answer.
Thanks for the advice but the poll doesn't let you chose two options.
Is it possible for both of the following statements to be true about one person, Bob:
1. Every single thing Bob does in his entire life was already inevitable even before he was born.
2. Bob has free will
Yes.
Because if I could see your future, your actions and outcomes would be inevitable from my perspective. It would not mean that you did not freely choose those actions along the way to the eventual outcomes.
Lack of free will does not entail predeterminism.
Things can be (and are) indeterministic... but that does not entail free will.
The balls' trajectories in the video below are indeterministic ... but yet the metal balls have no free will...