Is causation linguistic rather than in the world? Causality is just an abstract noun, a label of a specific quality where a process forces an effect or an other process to initiate. — Nickolasgaspar
First up, I meant causation was a thing in a very broad sense such that qualities, ideas and states can be things too, but no matter.
I’m just trying to get a sense of where your ideas map onto other thinkers and traditions.
Do you know the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy well? Might be worth checking out their entry on causation, or even this one
https://iep.utm.edu/causation/
I wouldn’t disagree with most of your intuitions. There are processes, when causation happens a new process starts, that’s all perfectly fine.
I’m sure we agree on most examples of causation too. The cue ball hits a pool ball and it causes another ball to roll into a particular direction. Of course, no problem with that.
Yet philosophy is not settled on what causation IS at bottom (see that link). It might not exist at all for instance, we might not need the notion. It might have something to do with counterfactuals (which might in turn mean thoughts about possible worlds). You might think it’s about raising probabilities (after all not all instances of smoking result in cancer). You might think that’s there nothing over and above causes and effects just being adjacent in some sense. You might think it’s a pattern of one sort of thing being followed by a thing of another sort.
I’m just finding it a little hard to see which ideas you support. Do you have a thinker or a theory which resonates with you? Or is this, as with my ideas, a novel theory?