Is it that the good can only be obtained via a balance between the good and the bad (to not bring in evil)? — javra
So you find that "love is not a wrong" to be in need of justification? Before I start, first reply contra what so that I might see what all the opposition is about. — javra
But keep spluttering away in suppressed fury. Love! LOVE!!! I tell you. — apokrisis
Now, just so it said, I won't apologize for implying that love is good. — javra
How can you, or anyone else, uphold responsibility sans “the whole idea of causality”? — javra
there are everyday, common sense situations where the chain of causality is simple--as you called them "brute force causes." I would have no problem with saying I hit the ball in the pocket. I caused the ball to go in the pocket. At human scale that kind of judgment is necessarily so I can be held accountable for my actions. — T Clark
Is not-love = hate? — apokrisis
And in social science, that would be competition and cooperation. Two forms of the good that go together splendidly. The basis of rational and civilised human social and economic order. — apokrisis
That’s why I don’t claim the idea of causality is useless in all situations. — T Clark
To you apathy, for one example, mild liking as another, are equivalent to hate? — javra
Though it was quite apparent that your problem was with love. It is to the latter that your replied to me, — javra
But I think this is beginning to touch on the nerve that might have been struck in you to elicit all those emotively hurt feelings, or so it seems — javra
And I am saying that if this is going to be a useful distinction – one that has dichotomistic rigour – you need to be able to tell me "as opposed to what?". How can I know what you think love is if you won't tell me what it isn't. — apokrisis
I have to be charitable and conclude that you only mean to prove my thesis with this little display of uptight contrariety. So thank you. :up: — apokrisis
Still, instantiations such as the latter cases of rape do attest to the fact that some adult humans become utterly immune to it. Love is to them a false promise, hence an utter falsity, hence a wrong reality to uphold, or, more simply, a wrong. Notwithstanding, duly agreed with the proposition: (universal) love is that which makes the world go round. — javra
You feel the notion of causality is too simple to deal with the complexities of reality. Applying its simple rules quickly becomes defeated by the fact that reality is just too much to be boiled down into chains of cause and effect. Everything is too networked, too interdependent, too full of feedback and strange loops. Stuff emerges. Things are transformed. Growth and development leave linear tales of cause and effect fast behind. — apokrisis
Which is all true. But that is only to say that Nature is not a machine. A machine is designed to have a mechanical logic, a cause and effect linearity. It can be described in terms of a blueprint and a system of differential equations. But Nature is irreducibly complex. Or at least that is the conclusion of the systems science tradition that has sought a better model of natural causality - the causality of a cosmos - since philosophy first started cranking up. — apokrisis
Massively large calculations could hope to do a reasonable approximation of the intricate patterns of connection that make up any natural system. One could simulate the weather, the internals of a proton, the boom and bust of fishing stocks or stock markets. Networks of feedback arranged into hierarchies of such networks over logarithmic scale. Throw in phase transition behaviour too. It’s all become standard causal modelling. — apokrisis
Well the history of humanity seems to suggest no. The problem is more the lag between the partial reductionst models and the later arrival of the more holistic models. We are already running at one level of inquiry before having learnt to walk at the next. — apokrisis
But then, I find the same can be said of "what's responsible for what": what is responsible for my sink being clogged; what's responsible for my window not opening; and so forth. — javra
However they may be thought to do it, non-human animals too operate by discernment of the same, both in terms of who and what as being responsible for what. We humans just term this issue one of causation. — javra
The invitation in your OP was to consider how we use the word"cause", and you showed that causal chains and inferring probabilistic causes are quite different ways of speaking.
— Banno
That's what I was trying to do. I don't think I've been very successful. — T Clark
My initial interest was in how the idea of cause applies to historical events (which is terribly fraught, slightly different and more nebulous to the matters you have raised). — Tom Storm
From what I've observed, most people don't recognize the irreducibly complex reality you describe. — T Clark
Your complex and nuanced understanding of causality is not how most people understand it. We civil engineers don't work with machinery, we go out into nature and treat it as machinery. — T Clark
When you're dealing with such a complex system, why do you need the idea of causality? Of course reality can be described using the language of cause, but why do it? — T Clark
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