we call every situation where a dynamics inside the set A is always followed (wrt time) by a dynamics in the set B as "A causing B" — Babbeus
x exerts forces that produce y — Terrapin Station
"x produces y" is a paraphrase of "x causes y". Your definition is even worse than circular: — SophistiCat
In your model universe and by your definition, everything causes everything that follows. — SophistiCat
Causality obtains simply when:
(a) one event, x, precedes another, y,
(b) x and y are contiguous (in terms of tactility),
(c) with respect to (a) and (b), x exerts forces that produce y, and
(d) y would not have occurred without (a), (b) and (c) being the case. — Terrapin Station
What does it mean that an event "exert forces"? — Babbeus
We know that electromagnetic forces always exist between charges: they are not "triggered", — Babbeus
I wouldn't say that forces exist between charges if matter is not coming into contact with other matter and influencing it — Terrapin Station
Again, definitions are synonyms, or they're not definitions. — Terrapin Station
In my model causality is defined between two sets of states, not between two states. It wouldn't make sense to say that the state A causes the future state B. — Babbeus
I am not sure why you are dwelling on this. — SophistiCat
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