Efficient cause can't explain anything all on its lonely ownsome. A holism which can provide the context is always going to be the other half of the story that completes the causal picture. — apokrisis
...in Newton's law, what causes an object at rest to move?
— Philosophim
Well, thank you for the example, and the opportunity it offers. You see, Newton's laws do not make mention of cause. That's the point made by Russell, and subsequently by myself. Phrasing them in terms of cause is removing them from their usual playing field and putting them into the language of our everyday interactions. — Banno
So what causes a body to cease remaining at rest? A force acting upon it. Words describe concepts, and concept of causality is very much alive in science. Now causality can be considered a large word, more generic such as "good" or "tree". Science might try to use words that are more specific parts within the concept of causality, but that is not a negation of the word, or its usefulness in day to day communication. — Philosophim
I notice you didn't answer the question. — Philosophim
But you say you understand causality to only mean efficient cause. And that to apply only in classical physics.
That is bonkers as far as I am concerned. — apokrisis
And yet induction is logical invalid, — Banno
in Newton's law, what causes an object at rest to move? — Philosophim
Yeah... and I keep thinking to myself, if cause is this fuckin' elusive, why even get to god? — Tom Storm
My problem is that my understanding of formal cause includes a need for intention. Formal cause doesn't make any sense unless the form is intended to achieve the final cause - purpose. Purpose requires intention. That gets too close to the noosphere for my taste. — T Clark
I see efficient cause as being both a necessary and sufficient (given the presence of the othe necessary conditions) condition for any event. The three other kinds being necessary conditions. — Janus
Yes. Final cause and formal cause combine like that in the pansemiotic view. But at the level of physics, this is no more than saying the second law of thermodynamics imposes a thermal direction on nature. The finality is the need to maximise entropy production and reach equilibrium.
So that is both sort of “mindful”. But also the least mindful notion of teleology we can imagine. — apokrisis
So you can either see causality as being about two different realms - res cogitans and res extensa - each with their own non-overlapping logic. — apokrisis
I keep wanting to keep it simple. Simpler. — T Clark
Final cause and formal cause — apokrisis
in Newton's law, what causes an object at rest to move?
— Philosophim
It all depends on where you place the frame and what you set as the scale. — T Clark
Well, yes, I did. But it was not an answer to your liking. — Banno
But why when that approach can only make causality incomprehensible? — apokrisis
And how could you explain why the radioactive atom decayed at some particular moment? If a triggering event is ruled out by physical theory, what then? — apokrisis
If you are serious about causality in a physical context, you are going to need to arm yourself with more resources. — apokrisis
Needing to apply scale does not make anything special or questionable. Its completely normal. — Philosophim
We scale it to what's reasonable. — Philosophim
If I would guess at the real underlying criticism of the word "causality", its that it has sub-concepts that are not easily conveyed through the context of a conversation. I'm not saying Aristotle's break down is correct, but you could construct a sentence with "causality" which could mean any one of the sub-types. Again, this does not mean "causality" does not exist or is useful. What is really being asked is. "Which sub-type are you intending through your context?" When conversation requires the accuracy of those sub-types be conveyed cleanly without possible ambiguity, then we should use a sub-type of causality. — Philosophim
R.G. Collingwood wrote that cause is a process that started out referring to human action and only later took on meaning as a non-human physical process. He saw the term cause as it is used by philosophers to describe physical action as a metaphorical usage from that original meaning. — T Clark
I think its a fairly straight forward notion in science that we look for a cause to explain why a state exists as it does. — Philosophim
Isn't that an argument for my position rather than yours? — T Clark
The scientist can use causal language just as you and I can. But does not use it in setting out Newton's laws. — Banno
“Impressed force is the action exerted on a body to change its state either of resting or of moving uniformly straight forward.”
“You sometimes speak of gravity as essential & inherent to matter: pray do not ascribe that notion to me, for ye cause of gravity is what I do not pretend to know, & therefore would take more time to consider of it.” — Isaac Newton
There are some ways to debate causality, but "Scientists don't use the word" is just silly. When you have to go to absurd lengths to avoid answering a simple and obvious question, its time to question whether your argument is absurd as well. — Philosophim
Final cause which I interpret as teleological in essence and if there's a purpose, it kinda makes someone, as opposed to something, an inevitability (design argument). — Agent Smith
Note that the whole "everything needs a cause" creating God is yet further evidence that a narrow "cause and effect", or efficient cause, model of causality is too limited. A larger model of causality is required. — apokrisis
I think its pretty obvious to anyone who's been in philosophy for even a short time that the next question becomes, "Well what caused God then? — Philosophim
If a person avoids causality because they think a conclusion leads to God, that's not square thinking. — Philosophim
What, that some events seem to need a push - an impressed force - like the billiard ball, while other things, like the decay, the quantum fluctuation, have only a global probability, the certainty of a statistical half-life, that bounds them? — apokrisis
Some situations conform to one end of the spectrum - where cause and effect seems to rule in strict counterfactual fashion. But others are somehow locally unprompted and yet exactly constrained by some probability curve or wavefunction.
Doesn’t this show that causality must be a bigger picture? — apokrisis
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