Any thoughts on this tangled mess? — I like sushi
If all causation is indirect then surely to refer to anything as 'causal' is nothing more than saying something 'is'. — I like sushi
it is impossible to confirm direct causation ergo why do we assume direct causation at all other than as means of anchor the constant change we experience as beings. — I like sushi
Even the use of logical tools fall apart when this is taken into consideration other than. Implications and Conditionals are meaningless under the regime of indirect causation. — I like sushi
If we cannot prove direct causation outside of the confines of abstract bounds, then how can we ... how can I say 'then'? How can a 'question' form about something yet to happen? — I like sushi
Indirect causation means that it 'could be because' but the 'because' is known as a direct causal term not an indirect causal term. — I like sushi
Are all our propositions based purely on an idea that Pure Abstraction overrules experiential evidence? — I like sushi
If all causation is indirect — I like sushi
↪Baden Bingo! Thanks for that. — I like sushi
If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe — Carl Sagan
One tells only the causal story that one finds interesting — unenlightened
One tells only the causal story that one finds interesting
— unenlightened
Yes, that's the key to understanding causality. — SophistiCat
Maybe we can take a simple scenario like the one below, and analyze things from there.
*
Two dominos, A and B and an agent, X.
X pushes Domino A, causing Domino A to fall against Domino B, causing Domino B to fall.
Domino B falling:
Proximal cause = Domino A falling against it
Distal (ultimate) cause = X pushing Domino A. — Baden
if you want to argue that there is Ultimate Causation go ahead. — I like sushi
So it was it lack of a manned deck that caused the incident or the inaccuracy of the autopilot? — I like sushi
There seems to be a given belief that temporal proximity has more weight to the contributing factors of some given outcome? — I like sushi
They cannot BOTH be ultimate causes - — I like sushi
If all causation is indirect then surely to refer to anything as 'causal' is nothing more than saying something 'is'. — I like sushi
An example would be the disjoint between a planned action and once taken in the spur of the moment, against items such as physical mechanics. The 'agency' of the human seems to run into conflict with the, how should I put it, 'laws of nature'.
The weight of importance is attributed to us because the immediacy of an action seems to trump the knowledge of the action. — I like sushi
Triggering cause (push of other domino or finger) vs. enabling condition — Baden
the storyteller has entered the story and transformed it. — unenlightened
That OP looks messy and unfocused to me. And this conversation seems now to be about everything and anything. — Baden
It might help to think of time 'running backwards' and then looking at how you view this or that as 'causal'? — I like sushi
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