Both [goecentric and heliocentric] models are useful. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have noticed this particular "why" question crops up repeatedly in various guises in philosophy.
— Luke
It's the search for a causal account. — apokrisis
‘Why’ questions look for an overarching explanatory scheme to organize particular facts or subordinate the patterns. — Joshs
But only one is realistic. — Wayfarer
However, you are right that I had overlooked the causal account given by a final (or efficient?) cause. — Luke
After completely accounting for how the brain produces qualitative experiences, the question of why we have qualitative experiences could be accounted for in terms of god or evolution. It could then be asked why god or evolution exist, but these seem like further "how" questions. — Luke
Hey I agree.
The objections to the idea of laws is that the word implies a power that makes something happen, whereas in natural law, there's no such observable power. See Nancy Cartwright's No God No Laws. — Wayfarer
Men make laws — Agent Smith
He must've thought it best to stick to demonstrable truths like karma and anicca as far as possible and minimize the metaphysical elements of his philosophy, Buddhism. — Agent Smith
Right - which is why the description 'scientific law' is treated with suspicion. It sounds anthropomorphic to some. — Wayfarer
Efficient cause answers the question of what particular event(s) conspired to trigger the observed result. So it sits with material cause (as the material potential which could be the substance partaking in the change) down at the "how" end of things. — apokrisis
Agent (the efficient or moving cause of a change or movement): consists of things apart from the thing being changed or moved, which interact so as to be an agency of the change or movement. For example, the efficient cause of a table is a carpenter, or a person working as one, and according to Aristotle the efficient cause of a child is a parent. — Wikipedia article: Four Causes
Perhaps "how" and "why" are rather rough and ready folk terms when it comes to analysing causality? So the better thing to do is move on and only employ the technical categories of Aristotle's metaphysics? — apokrisis
If you get the right causal language, causation should start to seem more common sense and not so dualistically divided between world and spirit, or whatever. — apokrisis
Do only humans make laws? — Agent Smith
Logical necessity and physical causality: Logical necessity is a function only of truth. The[re] is no intrinsic connection between antecedents and consequents in conditionals, or between premises and conclusions, apart from the truth functional form. Thus, as the Stoics first understood, a conditional means that it is false only if the antecedent is true and the consequent false. In formal deduction, if the premises are true, then the conclusion must be true. It doesn't matter what the meaning of the terms is. David Hilbert said that the terms could be beer steins and sausages as well as anything else (-- those Germans).
With causality, there are extra concepts. The principle of causality is that the cause makes the effect happen.
There is no causation in logic. Some formulas are equivalent to others, and common language confuses the issue with formulations like "this circle has circumference Pi because its diameter is 1", when in fact saying one proposition is the same as saying the other. It is not analogous to physical causation (I.e. The observation that some events often happen in succession).
Indeed, causation is, as Hume discovered, not deductively necessary (re the problem of induction). The best we can do is describe patterns in nature, one such kind being causality where we tell ourselves that the cause brings about the effect provided the correlation is strong and consistent across spacetime.
If causation has no deductive basis, all bets are off: there's no way we could predict the future, today a ball may bounce off the ground and tomorrow it might stick to it. If so, what about the law of karma? Buddha did emphasize anicca (the problem of induction). The world is going to be full of surprises then, oui? Today you might hurl invectives at someone and get beaten black and blue for it and the next day, doing the same thing, you might end getting a marriage proposal. — Agent Smith
Unfortunately, without some kinda pattern (laws/rules/principles), the world becomes incomprehensible and that's what Zen koans must be designed to evoke in the practitioner: utter perplexity and confusion (can one hand clapping make a sound? It just might, panta rhei) — Agent Smith
I see the point, but I can't help but think there's something wrong with it. I mean, it seems to me science relies heavily on the application of logic to the analysis of causal relationships. — Wayfarer
So I'm considering the idea that scientific law is where logical necessity and physical causation intersect, but I've never heard anyone else say that. — Wayfarer
shouldn't we just take the world as it appears to us — Agent Smith
instead of racking our brains trying to figure out the real truth? — Agent Smith
Perhaps it's just that we're stupider than we think we are and simply don't possess the processing power to suss this out. — Agent Smith
Assign x to a quantity of somethings and y to the number of related somethingelses and you have a model with b as a single parameter. I don't see how the mathematical 'necessity' can escape into the world and bind whatever is counted by x and y. — lll
There's something tricky about talking about either genius or stupidity from the outside. — lll
target practice or as scratching posts. — lll
Now I do not know whether I was then a man dreaming I was a butterfly, or whether I am now a butterfly, dreaming I am a man. — Zhuangzhi
if x and y are isometric against some measurable values — Wayfarer
Assuming the uniformity of nature, the bridge would collapse because our 'video game version' of it was wrong (wrong enough), and we made a decision that trusted the model when we shouldn't have (too heavy of a truck, tardy replacement or maintenance.) (I'm mostly a stats/computer guy who knows the math better than the applications, so maybe others can say more and say better.) — lll
Indeed! One has to be bat to answer the question "what is it like to be a bat?" Logic/reason is useless? — Agent Smith
With a bat, it seems hopeless. With geniuses, I think we slowly 'become' or assimilate part of them as we keep reading and thinking and writing. They fade in. But it's always a fusion. — lll
Do video game bridges collapse under extreme/excess weight like real bridges do? — Agent Smith
If you want them to, yes. I toyed around the Unity game engine briefly. It's got an impressive 'physics engine.' — lll
What does it have to be that way? How does the bridge know "that's the last straw, I'm collapsing"? — Agent Smith
Well, a really terrible but cheap model is to have the program say 'yes' for collapse if the input is greater than 2000 pounds and no otherwise. (It's terrible because the 2000 pounds was randomly picked.) — lll
Differential equations will offer more interest and fun. You can solve them numerically, watch a virtual cup of coffee cool. — lll
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