Do you consider the description of the salt marsh I discussed as a "toy case?" If so, I disagree. — T Clark
Do you consider the description of the salt marsh I discussed as a "toy case?" If so, I disagree. — T Clark
The question I've been asking is--if it is such a complex system of events, why bring the idea of causality into it at all. Why not just describe the system? — T Clark
There is meaning, and there is order. We find those things. — Patterner
Because cause is what people are often interested in. And precisely because systems are often complex, describing it is too much, if possible at all. — hypericin
That A casually impinges on B is both of practical significance and is a metaphysical reality. — hypericin
That your history of smoking is a casual antecedent to your lung cancer, while brushing your teeth isn't, is an interesting and real feature of the world. But, as you point out, the way it is a casual antecedent is usually quite complex, in a way that the language of cause doesn't easily capture. The word "cause" seems to imply a billiard ball view, where the cause solely produced the effect, which confuses and obscuring the reality, especially of very complex events such as wars, elections, and ecologies. But this doesn't mean we should throw out casualty entirely. — hypericin
This is a point very specific to Peircean semiotics and hierarchy theory...
If you have black and white as two complementary extremes, you must also have all the shades of grey which a black and white mixes. And that makes for a triadic story of complexity. This is a simplistic example. But you can see how it makes threeness the irreducible basis of a world with complex relations. You’ve got to break possibility apart in a way it then can relate over all its scales of being — apokrisis
Well the crowd I mixed with were mainly ecologists and biologists. — apokrisis
How could you - as an ecologist - even argue with someone who only thinks as a mechanist. — apokrisis
I don't know if anyone at all agrees with me, but I say the order of the bases in DNA mean amino acids and proteins.This makes me wonder, what would count as meaning that is independent or external to human thought? — Tom Storm
Peircean triads. Is it the degrees of freedom below, the constraints above, and the resulting phenomena? — T Clark
Although I'm not a ecologist, that's what I'm trying to do here. — T Clark
I find it helpful to compare it to the trinity. Which works in the same way, father (god), downward constraint, mother (Holy Spirit)upward constraint, son, (Christ)the resultant reality.I can never figure out what you mean when you talk about Peircean triads. Is it the degrees of freedom below, the constraints above, and the resulting phenomena?
Constraints — T Clark
I don't see how it's possible to deny that there is order in the universe, regardless of humans perceiving it. If solid H2O sometimes floated in liquid H2O, and sometimes didn't… If photons sometimes traveled at 299,792,458 mps, and sometimes didn't… If electrons sometimes repelled each other, and sometimes didn't…. if the strength of gravity sometimes followed the inverse square law, and sometimes didn't... On and on and on and on and on... It would be chaos if those things didn't always work the same way under the same conditions. The universe would be chaos. If a universe could exist at all. — Patterner
When we say that water freezes at 0 °C, it seems like an objective fact about the universe. But from my perspective, this predictability arises perhaps because we have structured reality with concepts like temperature, phase, and measurement. The water itself doesn’t carry the law of freezing; it only behaves in ways we can recognize once we impose these distinctions. What we call a ‘law of nature’ is therefore not an independent feature of the universe, but a pattern we have stabilized within an otherwise indeterminate reality.. — Tom Storm
It seems to me there could be a scifi story in what you're saying. If we came up with a way of thinking about something that actually changed its behavior, and it never behaved that way before we came up with that way of thinking about it. That would be pretty amazing. — Patterner
Extinction is an effect of the asteroid striking the Earth. However, it is not the constraint of a possibility. For that possibility would make us think of a world where that possibility exists. — JuanZu
I wonder if what we call ‘laws of nature’ are our codified ways of structuring reality, not independent features of the universe. — Tom Storm
Yes, Causation without Intent is what we call Accident. And the distinction is crucial in philosophy & science, but typically taken for granted. Unfortunately, Quantum Physics*1 has undermined the simple Certainty of Newton's physics/metaphysics, in which all events were intentionally caused by God. When you take God or Logos (reason ; intent) out of the equation things quickly get messy : like a half-alive cat in a box*2.Yes, the whole distinction between events that are intentional versus those that are not seems to complicate all of the discussions I’ve looked at. As I noted earlier, that’s why I avoided the whole subject of human causation. That doesn’t mean none of the issues discussed in this thread is relevant. — T Clark
That may be what YOU call it. I just call it causation. You can choose to believe there is intent involved in all causation, but you cannot possibly show that causation requires it.Causation without Intent is what we call Accident. — Gnomon
All answers depend on some unverifiable intrepretation of quantum mechanics. Which one is correct seems likely to remain a mystery, even though many are unwilling to accept that.IS THE CAT DEAD OR ALIVE OR BOTH? — Gnomon
Causation without Intent is what we call Accident. — Gnomon
I have no problem with the idea of constraint as long as we eliminate teleology. — JuanZu
The stability of H₂O, photons, electrons, or gravity is only meaningful within the systems of concepts, practices, and distinctions that we impose. — Tom Storm
Genetic variability is blind, and mutations can be of any kind. — JuanZu
But the system’s approach can deal in grades of teleology. Minds can form purposes, bodies can shape functions and then the physical realm can have its tendencies. — apokrisis
Tendencies are something that are created during the development of a process. Whereas teleology is the end that is found at the beginning of the process, even before the process begins. In my opinion, they are two very different things. — JuanZu
To me, teleology seems like a mystery to be clarified. For me, it has to be related to subjective time, which is different from the extensive time of physics. — JuanZu
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