The Humean issue is only about the certainty that can be ascribed to some causal belief, — apokrisis
What this thread demonstrates is just what a baked in conception of causality folk have. They believe that the laws of mechanics, logic and computation all point to the same small narrow device of the "cause and effect" connection of temporal chains of efficient causes. — apokrisis
Or, alternatively, that there is a bigger picture, but it doesn't make sense to call it "causality" anymore. — T Clark
To say that something is caused when we can't be certain of, or even close to knowing, what causes what, which is generally the case, is meaningless. What we call "causality" is an un-disentanglable tangle. — T Clark
I don't necessarily disagree with what you're saying, but to call it "causality" no longer makes sense. — T Clark
Or alternatively, you can stick with philosophical naturalism and instead conclude you haven't quite understood the complex nature of causality. More work needed. — apokrisis
It's rather like learning to be bilingual. You need to become fluent in both reductionism and holism to see how they are in fact the two poles of the one larger epistemic dichotomy.
So first comes the reductionist conviction - the standard model idea of efficient cause, or chains of cause and effect.
Then comes the holist backlash - the rejection of the mechanical model and the discovery of other "logics" like Aristotle's four causes.
Finally, after thesis and antithesis, comes the resolution. Colliding billiard balls sit at one extreme pole of our conception of causality, the random decay of a particle sits at the other. — apokrisis
What this thread demonstrates is just what a baked in conception of causality folk have. They believe that the laws of mechanics, logic and computation all point to the same small narrow device of the "cause and effect" connection of temporal chains of efficient causes. — apokrisis
And stand back to watch a particle decay carefully, you will discover that it then never does. — apokrisis
It's rather like learning to be bilingual. — apokrisis
But if you frame your notion of final cause so that it only applies to humans, or even organisms, then you rob it of that kind of causal status as it is not a necessary part of nature as a whole. It becomes just a local accident of evolutionary history.
So if you want to argue for intelligent design - big daddy in the sky - you still have to try all the usual rhetorical tricks to make it seem you are making a solid causation-based argument.
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
Can't you observe a particle decay without affecting it just by detecting the decay product? — T Clark
I simply wanted to know which of these 4 causes (one/a combination) is being referred to in the Cosmological Argument (first cause) for God's existence. — Agent Smith
Good question. First cause seems to conflate both efficient and final cause. Ask a theist for more clarity I guess — apokrisis
Let's say we just get rid of idea of causality. Doesn't your way of seeing things just revert to the hierarchical system we talked about last week - laws from below, constraints from above? What advantage do you get when you add cause to the mix? — T Clark
5.133 All inference takes place a priori.
5.134 From an elementary proposition no other can be inferred.
5.135 In no way can an inference be made from the existence of one state of affairs to the existence of another entirely different from it.
5.136 There is no causal nexus which justifies such an inference.
5.1361 The events of the future cannot be inferred from those of the present.
Superstition is the belief in the causal nexus.
...laws of probable sequence, though useful in daily life and in the infancy of a science tend to be displaced by quite different laws as soon as a science is successful.The law of gravitation will illustrate what occurs in any advanced science.In the motions of mutually gravitating bodies, there is nothing that can be called a cause, and nothing that can be called an effect; there is merely a formula. Certain differential equations can be found, which hold at every instant for every particle of the system, and which, given the configuration and velocities at one instant, or the configurations at two instants, render the configuration at any other earlier or later instant theoretically calculable.That is to say, the configuration at any instant is a function of that instant and the configurations at two given instants.This statement holds throughout physics, and not only in the special case of gravitation.But there is nothing that could be properly called " cause" and nothing that could be properly called "effect" in such a system.
Think of it as that cause does not play a part in physics, which inilvoevs more detailed analysis of functions rather than mere sequences of events; but that it is held by many to maintain a place in metaphysics, where it simplifies the philosopher's task by removing the need to follow the maths. You might notice even in this thread that folk's view on causation tends to follow their metaphysical prejudices rather than the physics. Physics, and the other sciences, just get on with it without having first to settle the many problems of causation. — Banno
I am not philosopher but I have generally held that what we call science hangs on tentative models of reality that don't make proclamations of absolute truth. Ultimately we tend to take 'cause' as a presupposition. — Tom Storm
The pragmatic approach is that induction works, so don't ask, — Banno
The view Russell is I think rightly critiquing is that of causation as "event A is caused by event B, which in turn is cause by event C, and so on" - cause as a regularity. — Banno
You might notice even in this thread that folk's view on causation tends to follow their metaphysical prejudices rather than the physics. Physics, and the other sciences, just get on with it without having first to settle the many problems of causation. — Banno
T Clark, from reading your replies in this thread, I suppose I still don't understand why in particular you seem to have an issue with causality. — Philosophim
I meant we hold the concept as an assumption and get on with things. We presuppose it works (pragmatically). — Tom Storm
It is true that (causation) does tend to get elevated to the exalted level of a key scientific principle - sufficient reason, or the principle of universal causation. It is just too hard to honestly doubt given the success of modelling the world in causal terms. — apokrisis
We might all grant the success of the modelling, without the addition of "...in causal terms". — Banno
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