Does this not avoid the question of what caused A to cause B at T1 but it caused C at T2 despite T1 and T2 being exact states? If the answer is nothing, than wouldn't it be accurate to define a state that is affected in a meaningful way when nothing happens as a spontaneously occuring event? — Hanover
It's about the limits of what can be known/derived.
Perhaps, but then the same can be asked when the causation isn't random. What causes A to (always) cause B rather than C? — Michael
So an event can have no cause at all? — apokrisis
Then why can't I say that in a random world A can cause either B or C because of something? — Michael
And you'd have to also say that the cause of it being B and not C was nothing — Hanover
And I do believe that spontaneity is a part of nature, but probability or possibility isn't the best way to go about thinking it... — StreetlightX
Novelty - which I mistakenly understood you to be asking after - is my preferred term, and in any case, if I were to make a point about randomness here, it would simply be a negative one... — StreetlightX
My objection is that the QM description of truly random events is incoherent. — Hanover
I understand the two questions:So you might ask of 2 "what makes it sometimes B and sometimes C?" but then I'll just ask of 1 "what makes it always B?" — Michael
Ontological answers:
Answer to #1: Nothing (spontaneous events have no causes).
Answer to #2: Something (all events have causes, even if I don't happen to know what it is). — Hanover
I am reluctant to separate it along the lines of natural and unnatural, as I consider humans part of nature. — Jeremiah
I don't see why A → B ∨ C entails spontaneity but A → B doesn't. In the predetermined world, B happens because of A. In the random world, either B happens because of A or C happens because of A. There's no spontaneity. Whatever happens is caused by something prior. — Michael
I don't see why A → B ∨ C entails spontaneity but A → B doesn't. In the predetermined world, B happens because of A. In the random world, either B happens because of A or C happens because of A. There's no spontaneity. Whatever happens is caused by something prior. — Michael
If you say that A must yield B or C but the option yielded is yielded without a specific cause, then I'd say you're referencing spontaneity on that level. That is, why did is "choose" B and not C? Was it because of D, E, or F, or for no reason at all? On the other hand, if you say that A must yield B in every case, I don't see an element of spontaneity. — Hanover
For any specific set of causes, if there can be an infinite set of events that follow (as there's no reason to limit things to just 2 possible choices), how do you conclude causation and not spontaneity? My point being that an inherent condition of causation is determinism, and any indeterminate system is necessarily non-causative and therefore spontaneous. — Hanover
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