When we say this--that it is impossible for X to occur without Y--however, do we mean that the necessary condition (Y) must be antecedent in time and occurrence to X? Or only that if X is the case, that Y must also be the case? Because it seems, from the way it is most commonly described, that the former is intended. But surely this seems false. — MichaelJYoo
I don't see how the statement implies that the wet grass occurred before the rain, so I'm failing to see the problem you are posing.If it is raining, then the grass outside is wet.
In what tolerable sense can it be said that the grass outside must be wet (Y) before it can rain? Yes, if it is raining, it is necessarily true that the grass outside is wet. But is it necessary that the grass be wet before it can rain or is raining? — MichaelJYoo
I guess it depends on where we drawn the boundary between raining and not raining. Is it raining when the water drops are condensing and falling from the sky before the water drops hit the ground, and how much water on the grass qualifies it as being wet? This isn't an instantaneous process.Time is not a factor in logical necessity. If it can't both be the case that "it is raining" and the "ground is not wet", then the ground being wet is a necessary condition for it to be raining. That doesn't mean the ground has to be wet first; just that it can't be raining without the ground also being wet. — Pfhorrest
I don't see how the statement implies that the wet grass occurred before the rain, so I'm failing to see the problem you are posing. — Harry Hindu
I guess it depends on where we drawn the boundary between raining and not raining. Is it raining when the water drops are condensing and falling from the sky before the water drops hit the ground, and how much water on the grass qualifies it as being wet? This isn't an instantaneous process. — Harry Hindu
In a deterministic universe effects are just as necessary of a condition of their causes as causes are a necessary condition of their effects. The difference between them is spatial-temporal.The apparent problem is that “the grass being wet is a necessary condition for it to be raining”, which is supposed to mean the same thing as “if it is raining then the grass is wet”, sounds superficially like the grass has to be wet first. — Pfhorrest
Sure. I could put a tarp over my lawn and then it would be raining but the grass wouldn't be wet. Sounds causal to me. If I can insert some element into the process to prevent what we claimed was a necessary condition for something else, or show that the effect (wet grass) isn't necessarily the result of it raining (it could be condensation, or someone is watering their grass), then obviously rain isn't a necessary condition of wet grass. It would simply be a matter of misusing/misinterpreting words.That’s why I said “IF it can’t be true...”. For the reasons you mention, it could be true that it is raining and the grass is not wet, so the grass being wet is not in fact a necessary condition of it being raining. But IF it were... — Pfhorrest
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