Can you give a reference for this? Three points: 1) I doubt he argued precisely in these terms, 2) if you're saying he said, then probably you should be able to provide references, 3) in general, references to underpin discussion are good.Hume specifically argued that one could not say one billiard ball caused another billiard ball to move by striking it. — Ron Cram
Are you sure? Asking, not telling. I think he must have meant that any laws of cause and effect weren't observable. Cause and effect itself is observable all day every day.Hume declared that cause and effect was not observable or ascertainable by sense data or logic. — Ron Cram
I have begun working on my second paper contra Hume. I call it "Hume's Failed Attack on Newton's Law of Cause and Effect." I am pretty happy with the Abstract and would be interested to talk about it.
Can you give a reference for this? Three points: 1) I doubt he argued precisely in these terms, 2) if you're saying he said, then probably you should be able to provide references, 3) in general, references to underpin discussion are good — tim wood
Cause and effect itself is observable all day every day. — tim wood
Interesting topic as it specifically relates to Hume. A quick question arises, though, are you suggesting that on principle, Newtonian physics is acceptable in this day & age (independently of whether Hume’s causal objection impugned it or not)? — aRealidealist
Regardless, I agree that Hume’s causal objection is objectionable (even if, not for the same reason or reasons), although only to an extent; so, nonetheless, I personally still accept Hume’s argument in regards to the relation between sensible things or objects of experience, but, I don’t accept it when comes to the relation between sensible & sentient things (& as all sensible things or objects of experience cannot be, in truth, taken as sentient, the reality of the distinction between sensible & sentient things is admitted [which leads me to my partial rejection of Hume’s objection]). — aRealidealist
Hume has something stronger in mind. It isn't just that laws of cause and effect aren't observable, but rather that there are no laws of cause and effect. — TheWillowOfDarkness
For exmaple, if there occurs a state of a ball which floats up when released, our insistence the ball must fall down by a law of gravity has no power at all. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Still, his theory is disturbing because whatever he says, of course we all believe in gravity and we really think one ball causes the other to roll even though that is not strictly observable. Luckily, Kant saves our obvious belief with a nice twist. He agrees with Hume that causation is not observable, but he places it in us as a pre-existing, pre-programmed category and thereby secures its reality. Causation really exists, not in itself, but as a necessity in us. — Congau
So why do you think David Hume rates as a philosopher? Why do you think Emmanuel Kant regarded it as such a serious challenge? — Wayfarer
To say we observe cause and effect is false. — Gregory
Hume is correct because he rightly identifies causal relations to be a feature of existing states, rather than being formed out of concepts of laws we imagine. "Laws" only function to describe when states are acting that way. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Hume is correct because he rightly identifies causal relations to be a feature of existing states — TheWillowOfDarkness
rather than being formed out of concepts of laws we imagine. "Laws" only function to describe when states are acting that way. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Still, his theory is disturbing — Congau
Newton's Law of Cause and Effect."
— Ron Cram
What's that, then? — Banno
I don't feel the need to refer to any "laws" in order to understand cause and effect? Wouldn't understanding of cause and effect come WAY before the creation of any laws? What are the laws based on if cause and effect is meaningless? — ZhouBoTong
What's that, then? — Banno
To me this was one theory early on in learning philosophy as a dilettante, validated me for myself as a real philosopher. — god must be atheist
The Third Law of Motion is also known as Newton's Law of Cause and Effect. — Ron Cram
Sir Isaac Newton published his work about the laws of motion in 1687. The concept of Law of Cause and Effect was introduced in the 19th century with the advent of Spiritism. — http://sirwilliam.org/en/the-law-cause-effect-reaction/
I call it "Hume's Failed Attack on Newton's Law of Cause and Effect." — Ron Cram
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