In a climate model it's going to be more likeEvery single step will have inherent to it B happening because A, even if it's some A radiation and some B H20. — Marchesk
I'm afraid I can't see what this account gives us that we don't already have with a simple physical theory that describes a scenario in which a hammer strikes the head of a nail, with a certain configuration of hammer, nail and wood, and predicts that the nail will enter the wood. Who needs a cause when we have a mechanism?In the physical context an efficient cause is something that acts on something else to produce a change in the latter. So, for example, the force of striking a nail with a hammer causes a nail to be driven into timber. and thus we understand the striking to be the cause. The striking of nails with hammers (or some other instrument) is also more or less universally correlated with nails entering timber, but it is not considered to be a mere correlation. The sound of striking is also more or less universally correlated with nails entering timber, but it is considered to be a mere correlation, and not a cause, of the nail entering the timber, because the sound exerts no force on the nail sufficient to drive it into the timber. — John
Certainly not ignoring.That said, within both contexts, the physical and the mental, there are clearly, in different ways, logical distinctions between correlation and causation; which you seem to be ignoring, or wanting to dissolve. — John
Maybe somebody else thinks that, but not me. If we have identified a mechanism, we have a richer understanding and a more confident basis on which to make predictions.does anyone think there's just nothing there to know? That correlation, and that at a pretty coarse level, is the best we'll ever be able to do? — Srap Tasmaner
I'd say they are different in that the predictive claim is clear whereas the causal claim is capable of many different interpretations. Just think of how many arguments you've been in or witnessed about whether something was somebody's fault.You could then just absorb the causal claim into the predictive claim, but they are fundamentally different aren't they? Or are they? — Srap Tasmaner
'Will writing from person X appear on their screen if they don't touch the keyboard and [insert a number of constraints to rule out things like using voice-recognition software or getting somebody else to type it]?' Probably not. I thought I'd already given that answer but in case I'm misremembering, there it is.So, for example, will the writing of Pheumenon's post still appear if he doesn't touch the keyboard? Or does the appearance of those specific letters depend upon him pressing the keys? — TheWillowOfDarkness
That is not my position, and I never said it was.I mean, if your position is that you have no idea whether or not my pressing these keys has something to do with letters appearing on the screen, then I can't help you. — Pneumenon
I like that way of putting it. I think in that case, probably no letters will appear on the screen. That's a prediction, which is based on a theory. Things fall into place so much more naturally when we talk in terms of predictions and theories, which are nice and concrete.Simple question: what do you think happens when Pneumenon doesn't press the keys? — TheWillowOfDarkness
No, we don't.we both know this — Pneumenon
No. Failure to assent to sentence S is not equivalent to assenting to its negation.Okay, so the following sentence is false: "The letter appears on this screen because I pushed a key."?
That you feel that is what most interests me here. What sort of benefit do you hope to obtain from an investigation into an approach to causality - beyond the sheer joy of human interaction in conversations like this?Because there's more to causality than pushing keys.
It was a bit loose of me to say there's no point in it. I think there's no philosophical point in it. The point for me of such discussions is that they are enjoyable. Sometimes I learn something along the way - usually unrelated to the ostensible topic. But the enjoyment is the main thing.The later Wittgenstein wouldn't have seen any point in having this discussion. And yet, here we are. — Pneumenon
No, I'm afraid I don't agree about the keys.If you agree that touching the keys causes the letters to appear (and you do), then we have one case right here where we know what cause is. — Pneumenon
Yes we can all use the word. But one need only look at a litigation or an inquest to observe that we (all of us, not just philosophers) do not know what we mean by it.We all can use the word "cause." — Pneumenon
This venture seems a bit circular to me. At least, it does if a 'way of approaching causality' includes a definition. If it does then one cannot understand the goal ('enabling us to understand diverse varieties of "cause" ') until one has decided on a definition of 'cause'. But then one cannot use the goal to decide what definition to choose.what is a way of approaching causality that enables us to understand diverse varieties of cause in a unifying way? — Pneumenon
[math] and [ /math]
[math]\begin{align} \sum_{i=1}^n r^2 = r\ \frac{1-r^{n}}{1-r} \end{align}[/math]
Is there any point behind this rhetorical question?Really? Might there not be another reason he begins with that? — The Great Whatever
Nonsense.To be liberal is to be contentless — The Great Whatever
I don't agree with that unsupported claim either.liberal Christianity is basically atheism. — The Great Whatever
I didn't note that at all. I presume your mistake comes from too hasty a reading, as I imagine you understand the difference between 'the membership falls' and ''no one will stick around'.And so as you note, no one will stick around, because the religion no longer has any content. — The Great Whatever
This is a topic that has taken my interest in the last week, after I heard a discussion between a liberal and an Evangelical Christian on ABC Radio National, in which the Evangelical said that Evangelicalism was better because when churches became liberal, they shrank.This may be true, but the assimilation of Christianity into modernity has to a large extent destroyed it — The Great Whatever
I agree with that.I'd say this goes country by country. For example, getting away from Saudi Arabia and Qatar's fossil fuel economies would be helpful in leveraging better human rights compliance from their theocratic, Muslim governments. — Heister Eggcart
What is your proposal for addressing it?and which needs to be addressed. — Heister Eggcart
What, exactly, are you advocating?What, exactly, are you defending? — Wayfarer
and the Amnesty page does not mention 'Islamic Culture'. Why not try to learn from the example of an organisation led by very wise and compassionate people?The Amnesty International page I cited above reproduces the quotation that Ahok was jailed for two years for: — Wayfarer
Yes, it reports 77 million hits.it's simply a search on the phrase 'Islamic culture', which produces X million hits, all apparently in reference to something non-existent. — Wayfarer
Surely that's not the first time you've found dubious info on wiki, is it? Wiki is a marvellous institution that has enriched my life in many ways, but it also has lots of errors. Sign up for an account and you can start correcting them. I do that from time to time on maths and science articles, when I have the energy. It's both fun and rewarding.All these pages are about nothing, then. — Wayfarer
Yes. This charge is a terrible thing and makes the future of Indonesia's democracy, such as it is, look shaky. As Benkei pointed out, the governor didn't even criticise the Quran. He (the governor) said that people - the Violent Fundies - were lying about what it said.the charge and the conviction were indeed a threat to democracy and pluralism in Indonesia, which I believe they are. — Wayfarer