Can we then dismiss ALL events that are temporally simultaneous as having nothing to do with causation for the sole reason of an absence of spatial contiguity? — TheMadFool
Even if purported cause and effect exist in the same frame of reference? Spatial contiguity if not temporal proximity.I think that according to Relativity even the temporal criterion is not valid — Jacob-B
It seems that for an event to cause another event the events have to become connected but with one event/object causing another event/object to alter.
It is hard to pin down what is an object and event and what is is dispositions and causal sphere.
It seems that we use induction to assert causal claims or to negotiate situations where we expect certain regularities for outcomes. If something is simultaneous but far away we are less likely to assert it as a cause.
I think the notion of regularities could replace the notion of cause where you don't assert a final causal explanation but assert a probabilistic outcome. — Andrew4Handel
I don't think causation has to do primarily with either of those things. I think it has to do more with our recognition of certain events following other events and they don't have to closely follow. Some people have thought that God is the cause of their suffering/pleasure. There is an example that has neither of those proximities. Cause and effect are all a matter of how we imagine the world to be. Though events being close in time and space certainly helps us recognize them more easily as causes. — khaled
The principle of locality (if you accept it) says that cause and effect must occur within each other's light cones, so that principle would deny for instance spooky action at a distance. — noAxioms
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