2. The magnitude of the effect is proportional to the magnitude of the *effect* — TheMadFool
In summary, the Axiom of Causality logically implies:
1. The doctrine of Karma (you reap what you sow) — TheMadFool
What's been drawn is an analogy. In defining their religion, the Buddhists have incorporated a kind of causality, specific in its relation of human causes to effects, but vague in the mechanics.
2. The magnitude of the effect is proportional to the magnitude of the cause.
This is also not true. The very notion of an explosion (an exothermic process) is a process which produces a net energy gain. The heat of a match is much less than the heat of the dynamite explosion it triggers. — Richard Bronson
What then is the analogy? Perhaps you could spell it out because I'm not seeing it. — elphidium55
But that does not mean that causality implies karma, any more than the fact that the Big Bang implies a creationist God because the universe was created. — Kenosha Kid
The axiom of causality as written does not limit the eventual effects of human actions even to other humans, and does not limit the numbers of causes and effects to be equal, or their kinds. It is not even evident that karma could even obey those axioms. For instance, everything I do may come back to haunt me (or a future incarnation of me), but what 'magnitude' would that leave for other effects, for instance the breeze generated in the air if I punch a person, or that person's demise? Surely all of the magnitude would be gobbled up by the equal and opposite reaction of future me being punched in karmic retaliation? — Kenosha Kid
The notion of karma is fundamentally causal in character but in the moral dimension. It basically claims our moral actions have moral consequences and this system operates in a hedonistic setting with pain and pleasure performing the function of karmic currency in which form moral debts are paid off.
To add, causality is like an overarching principle and all other theories based on causality, like the Buddhist doctrine of karma, must, as of necessity, be a subset, an offshoot, of causality. — TheMadFool
Nor does the axiom of causality logically imply karma. That was the point I quoted and took issue with, the sense that karma had been proven with the axiom of causality. — Kenosha Kid
Next comes finding oneself experiencing a rewarding or harrowing time at the hands of people but with no clear history of one having done anything to deserve either. The question, "to what do I owe this fortune/misfortune?" draws a blank. This condition of being undeserved of happiness or suffering, as the case may be, coupled with the fact that in the real world people return favors and retaliate to offenses (establishing the reality of karma) leads to the possibilty of past lives - these past lives serving to explain what one thinks is gratuitous joy/suffering. — TheMadFool
you're using inexact phrasing. — Kenosha Kid
what are its mechanisms? — Kenosha Kid
This isn't just asking for detail for the sake of it. If there is, for a moral action, an equal and opposite moral reaction, what is conserved by this and how? Can you construct a scale along this moral dimension so that we can say, Punching a little girl in the head + Getting kicked in the balls by a donkey + Coming home to find my house burgled = 0? — Kenosha Kid
Well, as I said, the idea is not to get a closeup view with discernible fine details of the doctrine of karma but to look at it from a distance and appreciate, hopefully marvel at, how karma is a good, if not perfect, fit in re the axiom of causality. — TheMadFool
Yeah, I'm not really asking for an answer so much as pointing out what would be required for karma to be a possible fit for an axiomatic causality. Things like "action + reaction = 0" and "magnitude of cause = magnitude of effect" need karmic definitions. Without this, there's no basis to say it is a good fit. That is what I meant by this being an analogy. — Kenosha Kid
TheMadFool — TheMadFool
My wife and I argued karma the other day, and low and behold, I convinced her that karma is a form of victim blaming.
To even suggest to a rape victim, that she deserved what she got because of some past life action on her part, is quite cruel, and that is why I call karma victim blaming and I discard the notion of karma.
We do reap what we sow, so there is a reaction to our actions, but only in this life as we cannot show that there is any other life after death.
Further, if you think of the rapist, you would have to see him as getting his just reward for suffering his own rape in some previous life.
I think the whole karma thing is screwed up.
Regards — Gnostic Christian Bishop
This implies some kind of (natural) selective process that objectively judges our actions and puts our minds into other bodies. This also implies that our minds are seperate from our brains/bodies, or that we have souls that can be placed into different bodies.The notion of karma is fundamentally causal in character but in the moral dimension. It basically claims our moral actions have moral consequences and this system operates in a hedonistic setting with pain and pleasure performing the function of karmic currency in which form moral debts are paid off. — TheMadFool
This implies some kind of (natural) selective process that objectively judges our actions — Harry Hindu
The causes of any one of us suffering more than others has nothing to do with what we did in a prior life — Harry Hindu
It has to do with the circumstances and environment in which we were born and live. Think of it as being born at the wrong place at the wrong time. — Harry Hindu
Being that I am half Hindu, I see karma as consequences of our actions, which could include the reactions of others. Humans are a highly intelligent social species. People that you have wronged can remember that and tell others about your behavior. Your reputation precedes you, and can lead to you being rejected by your social group. — Harry Hindu
TheMadFool — TheMadFool
Perhaps if you consider the fact that if everything has a cause then our experiences in the moral dimension should also have a cause, you'll get an idea of how one particular kind of causality, one based on morality - can belong to the much larger set of all causal relations. — TheMadFool
Nothing but wishful thinking, for reasons that others have set out. Justice is not an inherent attribute of the universe. If you want justice you will have to do the work of making it happen. — TheMadFool
Nothing we can confirm. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I have that idea, the analogy is fit for that purpose. What I want to know is the sorts of things preserved to ensure causality in the moral dimension, i.e. the particulars of this instance of the axiom of causality.
I gave one possible example of what I mean: personal harm. If the sum total of harm I receive over all of my lifetimes is 112 H, then it is expected I caused 112 H of harm across those lifetimes. Without something conserved, those laws are meaningless, because they are conservation laws. That is why it is only analogous to the axiom as presented. — Kenosha Kid
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