If one divides time successively one ends up with Zeno Paradox situations, but I think with indeterminism you have a potentially different problem.
Consider quantum indeterminism -->
1) What happens between the moment a photon makes contact with a window and the next moment it either passes through or becomes one of the "reflected four" out of 100?
2) What happens between the moment a particle is in superposition and the moment it actually ends up in a singular position?
3) What happens between the moments before & after a particle is emitted from an atomic nucleus due to radioactive decay?
So given these all seem like examples of irreducible events, it might be better to think of a "thick present" like the physicist Lee Smolin talks about ->
All to say if an event is genuinely indeterministic, it arguably has to be irreducible with respect to time?
Consider quantum indeterminism -->
1) What happens between the moment a photon makes contact with a window and the next moment it either passes through or becomes one of the "reflected four" out of 100?
2) What happens between the moment a particle is in superposition and the moment it actually ends up in a singular position?
3) What happens between the moments before & after a particle is emitted from an atomic nucleus due to radioactive decay?
So given these all seem like examples of irreducible events, it might be better to think of a "thick present" like the physicist Lee Smolin talks about ->
Quote:As Rovelli has emphasized, time is a complex phenomena, and we should be precise and assert exactly which aspects are being claimed to be fundamental. I will be more precise in section 3 below, but let me briefly say here that the aspect of time I assert is irreducible is its activity as the generator of novel events from present events[3]. This activity generates a thick present,by which is meant that two events in the present can be causally related with each other. This thick present is continually growing by the addition of novel events. At the same time other events in the thick present, having exhausted their potential to directly influence the future, slip from the present to join the always growing past. This continual construction of the future from the present, which then becomes past, makes the distinction between past, present and future objective and universal.
All to say if an event is genuinely indeterministic, it arguably has to be irreducible with respect to time?
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell