I’d like to discover what differences people would find between “that which determines X” and “that which causes X”. — javra
You can either refer to a fantasy world where A does indeed cause (or determine) B.
Or otherwise if you want to refer to the 'real world' you will have to rely on statistics (and perhaps the inferred probability associated with those statistics.) — A Seagull
When I write a dynamical systems program to obtain an image, I determine the image. When the program runs, it causes the image to appear. — jgill
Then you need to ask why events in a dynamic world can be determined statistically. The fact that statistics exists, and is useful for something, must indicate something more meaningful than statistics exist and is useful. Why does it exist and why is it useful? What does it mean to be useful? The truer the map the more useful it is.Or otherwise if you want to refer to the 'real world' you will have to rely on statistics (and perhaps the inferred probability associated with those statistics.) — A Seagull
When I write a dynamical systems program to obtain an image, I determine the image. When the program runs, it causes the image to appear. Sorry this is such a trite example. :worry: — jgill
It seems to me that the difference is simply temporal. Both events are required to occur in sequence, one before the other - writing a program and then running the program on a computer - for the image to appear on the screen. You can't run a program that hasn't been written.So when you determine the image via X, Y, and Z, how do you not cause the properties of the image via these same means? And when the running program causes the image to appear, is not the image’s appearance determined by the running program?
I’m trying to figure out what, if anything, makes the two different. — javra
It seems to me that the difference is simply temporal. Both events are required to occur in sequence, one before the other - writing a program and then running the program on a computer - for the image to appear on the screen. You can't run a program that hasn't been written. — Harry Hindu
What you call determinancy I see as snapshot views at different sizes relative to the process we are talking about. Think about determinancy as spatial causation and efficient as temporal causation.I agree that in both examples the processes are temporal. So, if I’m interpreting you correctly, you’re saying that (efficient) causation is necessarily temporal whereas determinacy in general is not. Hence, material, formal, and teleological determinacy can each occur in simultaneity relative to that which determines and that which is thereby determined – whereas efficient determinacy, what we today most often interpret as causation, is always temporal. If so, I agree with this as well. — javra
So there are determinations which are not causes. Though mathematicians will say things like "it causes the only element left to be three". — fdrake
When I write a dynamical systems program to obtain an image, I determine the image. When the program runs, it causes the image to appear. — jgill
This doesn't sound like a very useful program that only displays one image - the one you determined. Computer programs are useful when they can be applied to create various images for different people based on the input from different users. The programmer doesn't necessarily know what images the program will generate because they are aren't aware of all the different kinds of input from different users. We can try to guess, but we can't account for every instance, which is why programs can have bugs. — Harry Hindu
Why does it exist and why is it useful? — Harry Hindu
My qualm isn't about the scribbles we use, but what the scribbles refer to.do you have any qualms in terming Aristotle’s four modes of explanation four types of causes? Or would you rather that the term “causes” is reserved for only those causes/determinants that are temporally prior to their effects? — javra
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