Question begging — Bartricks
you have just taken as gospel the very thesis whose credibility is in question, namely that every cause precedes its effect. — Bartricks
derived from empirical evidence and it's held up to scrutiny. — Agent Smith
The cause must always be anterior to the effect. — Agent Smith
Substance causation is causation by a substance. When the substance is an agent it is called 'agent causation'. You are simply referring to agent causation when you maintain that an act of will is not an event but causes an event. — Bartricks
But anyway, as you clearly accept the coherence of substance causation, then you should also accept that there can be simultaneous causation, for that's what one has with substance causation. When a substance causes an event, the causation and the event are simultaneous. To maintain otherwise would be to have to posit some earlier 'event' that caused the later event - but then that's event causation, not substance causation. — Bartricks
You clearly don't really understand what substance causation is. — Bartricks
Substance causation involves a substance - an object - causing an event. Not - not - by means of some other event. That's event causation. But directly. — Bartricks
You can put whatever label you like on the instantiation of that causal relationship - you can call it an 'act' or a teapot, it won't make a difference. The simple fact is that substance causation involves the instantiation of a causal relation between a substance and an event. And when does that occur? At the time of the event. Thus, substance causation 'is' simultaneous causation. — Bartricks
But is it the case that causes precede their effects? Well, there is no consensus on it, but probably most philosophers would accept that simultaneous causation is coherent. Kant used a famous example of a ball on a cushion. The depression in the cushion is being caused by the ball on the cushion even if both call and cushion have been in that arrangement for eternity. Thus in this case we have simultaneous causation. The depression is being caused by the ball, but there was no time when the ball came to be on the cushion. — Bartricks
1) This is an arbitrary assumption or, at best, a hypothesis, and as such, it doesn't prove anything.The depression in the cushion is being caused by the ball on the cushion even if both call and cushion have been in that arrangement for eternity. — Bartricks
This is an arbitrary assumption or, at best, a hypothesis, — Alkis Piskas
"the cushion envelops, enwraps the ball" as well. — Alkis Piskas
So, this is not a valid example. — Alkis Piskas
Do you have another one, where the effect precedes the cause or there's a simultaneous cause and effect? — Alkis Piskas
(BTW, you are talking about the "causality principle", the reversibility of which has is still to be proved ...) — Alkis Piskas
In that case there is no cause for the depression, because there is no existence of the cushion with any other shape than that in which the ball fits. There is no evidence that the ball caused the depression - there is only your understanding of a ball and cushion as temporally related objects, which these are not. So you can’t apply that understanding here. — Possibility
The problem is, you’re using actual objects and their interaction in time as a model for eternity. — Possibility
That's because I have never come across "substance causation" before, it seems to be your idiosyncrasy, — Metaphysician Undercover
you haven't yet explained it in a coherent way. — Metaphysician Undercover
Causation at the same time? What on Earth do you mean? Simultaneous? What events are simultaneous? What causes? You're drifting off... — Haglund
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