Substance causation is causation by an object - a thing - rather than an event. So, not causation by a thing changing, but a change caused by a thing. It's not that the thing causes the event by undergoing some change - for a change is an event. The thing causes the event directly.
The first event or events are going to have been caused this way (some argue that all events are caused this way - that events are just manifestations of substance causation). — Bartricks
The first event or events are going to have been caused this way (some argue that all events are caused this way - that events are just manifestations of substance causation). — Bartricks
Many in the free will debate think that free will requires substance causation, where the substance in qusetion is ourselves (that's called 'agent causation'). And an apparent example of substance causation would be our own decisions, which we seem to make directly. — Bartricks
As far as I can tell from my philosophical readings, events are temporal phenomena that can be extended or instantaneous: parties, watching movies, playing chess, calculating an equation are considered examples of temporally extended events. Explosions, particle decays, date expiration, snapping fingers are considered examples of temporally instantaneous events. Not sure to understand the link you see between the notions of “event”, “causality”, and the question of the reversibility or the direction of motion (or time — neomac
A glass breaking is an instantaneous event. Why do you see it as paradoxical? — neomac
Again, I would distinguish between what is the case (metaphysical question) and what we can "see" (epistemological question).How can we see which way motion goes by looking at a point? — Haglund
Yes - specifically because of the softness (ie. 3D variability) of the cushion in relation to the ball. You can’t extend this same quality of softness to an eternal entity - if there is no 4D variation (it never changes), then there is no 3D variability (no softness). Case closed. — Possibility
I accept that there comes a point in our relation to events where ‘cause’ is a meaningless term - I’d say it’s about where we posit an infinite, either as quantity or quality. — Possibility
I’m going to be pedantic for a sec: aren’t events still things? — Possibility
Again, you're not engaging with my arguments.
I don't know what you mean by a 'mechanism'. I'm assuming you mean that there needs to be some kind of intermediary between cause and effect. How does that change anything?
So, I'll just keep repeating myself until you answer: if A, a substance, causes B, when does it do so? — Bartricks
No. I am not being imprecise in my language. The problem is that others use language in a sloppy way.
A thing - or substance or object - is a bearer of properties. An event is an occurrence. A happening. — Bartricks
Note, you can have a thing without there being any events. My mug is not an event. It is a thing. And things do not depend on events. You can't, however, have an event without any things, for events always involve things. Happenings happen to things. They undergo a change or initiate a change or whatever. But the dependency is clear: events depend on things, things do not depend on events. — Bartricks
Yes - specifically because of the softness (ie. 3D variability) of the cushion in relation to the ball. You can’t extend this same quality of softness to an eternal entity - if there is no 4D variation (it never changes), then there is no 3D variability (no softness). Case closed.
— Possibility
What on earth are you on about? If a cushion exists eternally it is not soft? What? — Bartricks
The ball does not come to be on the cushion. It is on the cushion from the beginning. — Bartricks
So, tell me, what is the cause for the cushion's deformation? — Agent Smith
So, tell me, what is the cause for the cushion's deformation?
— Agent Smith
The ball is the cause — Cuthbert
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