This does not imply that they are a matter of chance. Indeed, admitting that they are a matter of chance would amount to offering a further explanation—a chancy one—of their presence. The friends of RVC firmly deny the alleged need to appeal to a different ontological category (something which is not a regularity but has metaphysical bite) to explain the presence of regularities — Psillos
I just listened to an old podcast on The Partially Examined Life website about the Tractatus and Wittgenstein's view on science. Wittgenstein put forth a Humean view of causality in which A just happens to always be followed by B, even though both are contingent, such that our expectation that B will follow A in the future is merely one of past habit, which need not hold. C might follow A next time.
The example given is Hume's sunrise every day. The podcasters were gushing about Wittgenstein's view of necessity just being a series of contingent events where the sun always rises, even though it could not rise on any given day.
I find this view of causality to be extremely impoverished. Let's take a coin flip. We say it's 50/50 whether it will be heads or tails. Now if we came across a coin that had landed heads for hundreds of billions of days in a row (the sun rising), then we wouldn't think this was because of some incredibly low statistical event had occurred. We would think that the coin had been rigged to always land heads. As such, we would predict that the coin would continue to land heads because of the rigging. And this is how physicists treat the sun continuing to shine everyday.
They go on to discuss laws of nature as just being logical propositions related to empirical observations of particulars, and nothing further. So gravity is an equation derived from making a bunch of observations of falling objects.
Again, this is an extremely impoverished view of laws. General Relativity talks about gravity in terms of not just particulars, but spacetime itself being bent. And this applies generally across the entire universe, to the point of determining the eventual fate of the cosmos regarding further expansion or contraction.
If laws of nature are merely logical propositions regarding sets of particulars, then why would we expect them to have such far reaching consequences? When Newton arrived at his law of gravity, people were surprised and astonished that there would be a force that pulled the same on cannon balls, feathers, and heavenly bodies. That was not expected.
Furthermore, the relationships between different fundamental concepts in physics, such as acceleration, gravity, energy mass, space and time combines the cosmos into an extremely deep and astounding order that goes beyond noticing that you can apply an equation to some particulars.
The really big question for Humean causation is why would we expect the universe to be contingently ordered to such an astounding degree? Why would it stay ordered for billions of years when it can at any time be otherwise? The sun could blink out tomorrow, and gravity could become repulsive, and so on. Would you expect that kind of contingency to result in the universe we see around us? — Marchesk
I find this view of causality to be extremely impoverished. — Marchesk
Thus Wittgenstein/Hume can preserve necessity (if B does end up always following A), while not introducing any mysterious causality. That sounds absurd. — Marchesk
I have a hard time with the concept that B following A always happens, but it could also not happen. — Marchesk
See, I think that sounds perfectly sane. I think the reason you think it sounds absurd is because it goes against what you thought causality is (but is not.) — Magnus Anderson
Now if we came across a coin that had landed heads for hundreds of billions of days in a row (the sun rising), then we wouldn't think this was because of some incredibly low statistical event had occurred. — Marchesk
Hume demands that we can only observe and record. The only way we can have knowledge about the universe is to see if our observations repeat, and by habitually we can come to conclusions a posteriori. — charleton
Hume demands that we can only observe and record. The only way we can have knowledge about the universe is to see if our observations repeat, — charleton
The laws we devise are consequent on this and not things that the universe is compelled to obey. It's just the way things are. Making physical laws is just a short hand to assist us to describe our understanding, and as such are contingent on the continued observations we make. — charleton
So mechanics is just a limit state description of fluctuations gone to equilibrium. It is not the way the world fundamentally is - at the small or primal scale. But it is certainly the way the world has pretty much become once it has cooled and expanded enough to be completely constrained by its own history. — apokrisis
That still doesn't answer the question as to why the sun would rise hundreds of billions of times in a row. — Marchesk
The worry here expressed by both Plato and Kant is that skepticism is the result, not knowledge. Sensory impressions alone can't give us knowledge — Marchesk
That still doesn't answer the question as to why the sun would rise hundreds of billions of times in a row. — Marchesk
The claims is that there is no reason for the sun to continue to shine, it just does. — Marchesk
This is at odds with scientific explanation, which posits reasons why the sun shines, and thus it's perfectly valid for us to expect it to continue to do so. — Marchesk
This isn't because of habit, it's because of gravity and nuclear physics. — Marchesk
History has a way of constraining possibility. — apokrisis
So it is true that the world seems to be fundamentally causal in this fashion. We can describe some general law that must be obeyed by every particular material event. Regularity gets locked in by a context. — apokrisis
However physics also now tells us that at the fundamental level - once history and context have been stripped away - then action seems to become a-causal or indeterministic. — apokrisis
So this does not support what you call a Humean view of causation - that it could all be just one mass of amazing coincidences. — apokrisis
Using that as an argument in favor of a metaphysically thick theory of causality is really weird, since what Kant does is to take causality out of the world and put it in us. — Πετροκότσυφας
There are various suggestions as to what that something might be. As there are criticisms of them. But noone conception of causality seems to be free of legitimate criticism.
* What I understand here as necessary connection is "production", not just dependence. — Πετροκότσυφας
It's not even a question. There is no more reason 'why' the "sun rises" than why there is a universe in the first place! — charleton
Like with any rule or principle of necessity, what we mean by causality cannot be verbally represented but only behaviourally demonstrated, similar to how a mathematician cannot linguistically represent what he means by "infinity", for it is a rule pertaining to the behaviour of the mathematician and it is not an object that the mathematician is pointing at. — sime
The truth is that ONLY sensory impressions give us all the knowledge we will ever have. If that leads you to skepticism you'll just have to lump it. — charleton
You don't understand what the question "why the sun would rise hundreds of billions of times in a row?" means. That's the problem. When you ask a question such as "why X at point in time t?" you are asking "how can we calculate that the event X, and not some other event Y, will occur at point in time t based on events that occured before the event X?" That's all that is being asked by such a question. — Magnus Anderson
t isn't. You are merely confused. And the reason why it is "valid" for us to think that the past will repeat in the future is because we have evolved in relatively stable environments. — Magnus Anderson
It is because of observations + habit. Our method of reasoning is a habit. This habit has evolved in relatively stable environments. — Magnus Anderson
I simply act in a certain fashion and then the sun comes up, without me having a reason for my behaviour. And the scientist after giving all of his verbal justifications acts similarly, without reasons. — sime
). At any rate, there's no reason to suppose that cognitive science which examines the infants' abilities at causal representation supports Kant's apriorism and not Hume's habit theory. In fact, I think it tends towards the latter. — Πετροκότσυφας
Yes and no. They do not ask why, they DO ask how.
If you want to know why ask a priest, as they have all the answers ready made. — charleton
Obviously you have to conceptualise, but you can only conceptualise FROM sensory information which is the source of ALL knowledge - quite obviously. — charleton
Locke suggests we start as a Tabula Rasa, I do not exactly agree with that, yet without the sensations we have nothing to work on. — charleton
I have no idea what your objection or solution to this rather obvious reality is. — charleton
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