Or in short, you can have cause-and-effect as a very useful fiction. — tim wood
Now in practicality, this would assume that in order for zero to exist in our world, we would need to exile a substance from reality in order to create null. But according to particle theory, we cannot destroy a substance, only replace/displace its form. — john27
↪john27 I have a forum post here that goes over your subject matter. https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/12098/a-first-cause-is-logically-necessary — Philosophim
I think it might be better if I restate my point to that because a Primary cause is the cause of all things, it incorporates all things within itself. Therefore a complete eradication of the universe would be necessary to create a zero, which would then by necessity need an equal amount of antimatter to eradicate it completely, but because there is a fewer amount of antimatter(or so it is believed)than conventional matter, It cannot happen. Therefore, 0, in the complete sense cannot exist. — john27
It is a measurement of Entropy. — I like sushi
In my opinion an excellent definition. Short, clear, exact, precise. But the question remains if this is the way the world works, or is this the way we model or perceive the world? Is cause-and-effect out there, or in the mind? Hume says not out there; you can't find it. Kant that it's the sense the mind makes of the world-as-the-mind-perceives-it, and thus inaccessible in itself. And it is my understanding that modern science really uses the concept of fields while at work, and cause-and-effect as a convenient fiction for explanations of some phenomena for laymen.To the best of my knowledge, I would say that a cause is an act that creates an effect. — john27
A question I've asked before (got from a book) is, if you're blowing a tree-stump out of the ground with some dynamite, what exactly "causes" the dynamite to explode? Some folks here who claim expertise on these matters have refused to try to answer. What do you say? — tim wood
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