The explanations I have received, and have given, have been narratives, not mere references. The narrative (which as I have said, has the formal structure of a deduction that starts from premises that the explainee understands and believes, and proceeds by steps that the explainee understands and believes) will usually refer to many different phenomena along the way, with none of them distinguished from the others and having the special label 'cause' affixed to it. — andrewk
I haven't seen it put the way you put it before. It sounds like you are saying that Aristotle's aim was to distinguish the different ways in which people used (the ancient Greek equivalent of) the word 'cause'. If so, then maybe I have been too hard on him. I don't know how Ancient Greeks used words. He's likely to know much more about that than me. Also, even though there will be big differences between how they used a word and how we use its modern equivalent, I think I see some similarities between the uses he describes and the modern uses. — andrewk
I don't see people around me using 'cause' in the sense of his 'final cause' though. Maybe it's just the society in which I live, but people I know just don't use the word 'cause' that way. I have no reason to suspect that Ancient Greeks didn't though. The closest I have observed is that people will use the word 'because' to explain why they did something. But I find the similarity between 'because' and 'cause' purely textual, not semantic. — andrewk
Yes.Anyway, "deductive form" something like what I did? — Srap Tasmaner
I can't see how necessity can be understood to obtain in particular interactions unless determinism is assumed to be the case. — John
It's not really about holding one responsible for their actions. Punishment is meant as a deterrent for that person, and others, from thinking about performing that action in the future."Because" is related, because when we ask why of an act, we answer with "because". So "because" speaks of the reason for the act, but the actual cause of the act is the will of the individual. If the individual is not considered to be a freely acting "cause" of a situation, one cannot be held responsible for that situation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Exactly, that's why the concept of efficient cause quite easily leads one into determinism. We only escape determinism by assuming that there are things which are uncaused in the sense of efficient causation. We still allow that these things are "caused" though, in the sense of final cause. But this means there is a radical difference between efficient cause and final cause. — Metaphysician Undercover
If indeterminism, the position that some things are not efficiently caused at all, is understood to be the case, then those undetermined events must be seen as either purely random, absolutely arbitrary, or purposely caused by 'something' outside of the system of efficient causation. Any truly final cause must, logically, be a cause which is not itself caused. — John
Blaming, praising and judgement of guilt are the same as holding someone responsible. So that would be circular. Trust and distrust would be the same as providing a positive or negative consequences to the person who performed the action. Distrusting someone is a punishment. Would you like it if others distrusted you and wouldn't that change the way you behave in the future?Holding one responsible means to recognize the individual as a cause. It may entail many things, blame, praise, judgement of guilt, trust, distrust, etc.. Whether or not punishment is due is not necessitated, and this requires another judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
Blaming, praising and judgement of guilt are the same as holding someone responsible. So that would be circular. — Harry Hindu
Distrusting someone is a punishment. — Harry Hindu
What use is blaming someone without punishing them (creating a negative consequence as a result of their action in order to prevent those actions in the future)? In my experience, simply blaming people isn't useful. You have to supply a negative consequence in order to prevent future acts, or they just end up doing it again. — Harry Hindu
Sheesh, MU. Can you use the dictionary, please?Not for me they are not the same. These named things are the result, or consequence of holding one responsible. Responsible means that one is accountable. Blaming and such only occur posterior to an act which one is held accountable for. I other words, being accountable, (responsible), is necessarily prior to blame, judgement, etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
How is it nonsense? Answer the question I posed. Would you like others to distrust you, yes or no? If not, then wouldn't it be a punishment if someone distrusted you after something you did that you are being blamed for? Yes, or no?That's not true. In fact, I think it's nonsense. Distrust is held for the protection of oneself, not to punish another. The fact that the one being distrusted may not like being distrusted does not necessitate the conclusion that the distrust is being held for the sake of punishment. I can't imagine distrust being held for the sake of punishment, that seems like a misunderstanding of "distrust" to me. — Metaphysician Undercover
If what I said is nonsense, then I have to question your existence as a social human being. It has been in my experience throughout my over 40 years of life that, if you give people a taste of their own medicine, then they stop doing what it is that they are doing that you don't like. They may continue to do it to others, but they won't do it to you any more.This is complete nonsense. First, punishing someone, unless it's a youngster just learning habits, rarely prevents the person from carrying out a similar act in the future. In most cases, the adult who misbehaves will continue to do so regardless of punishment. Does getting a speeding ticket prevent you from speeding again? If that were the case, we could get rid of all the speeders by handing out tickets. Second, blaming someone without punishing that person is extremely useful, because it allows you to remember something about that person's character. This information will be very useful in your future decision making concerning dealings with that person. — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you like others to distrust you, yes or no? — Harry Hindu
If not, then wouldn't it be a punishment if someone distrusted you after something you did that you are being blamed for? Yes, or no? — Harry Hindu
Arguably, there could be rational justification if said praise or blame elicited a change in the agent's future behavior in line with the desires of the praiser or blamer. Even if we believe that our child was determined by forces beyond his control to take the cookie from the cookie jar, leveling blame (in the form of verbal admonishment) upon him may thereby decrease future incidents of his taking a cookie from the cookie jar, which suits our desire of our kid not sneaking so many cookies.If every act of a person is determined wholly by factors beyond their control; whether that be genes, social conditioning, neuronal activity or whatever, then there can be no rational justification for praising or blaming them. — John
Fine. We can substitute the word, "punishment" with "consequences". Punishment is a kind of consequence. I did use the word, "consequences" in my previous post to make the same argument, so your argument doesn't do anything to take away from my assertion that knowledge of the consequences causes changes in behavior and decision-making.If not, then wouldn't it be a punishment if someone distrusted you after something you did that you are being blamed for? Yes, or no? — Harry Hindu
No, I explained this. The fact that one dislikes what another person does, does not imply that the act of the other was carried out as punishment. I do not like a lot of things which a lot of people do, but it does not follow that these things are punishment to me. "Punishment" implies intent to punish, on the part of the punisher. As I explained, distrust is not intended as punishment, it is intended as protection for oneself from the other. — Metaphysician Undercover
Exactly. You value certain people's trust more than others. Losing their trust would be a dire consequence that causes you to think twice before doing something that would jeopardize losing that trust.Some people I would not like them to distrust me, others I don't care if they distrust me. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course there can be rational justification for praising or blaming someone in a deterministic world. Praising and blaming causes changes in behavior in the future. It's the logic of praising or blaming someone after the fact, that I don't get. Why praise or blame a "free agent" (and what does "free agent" mean, anyway?)? Isn't it future decision-making and behaviors that we are trying to change? Isn't that why we try to make the consequences of other's actions known to them - so that the one's making a decision will consider the consequences as part of making the decision?The logic of praise and blame entails that the person to be praised or blamed for some act or achievement is the unconstrained agent and origin of the act or achievement. If every act of a person is determined wholly by factors beyond their control; whether that be genes, social conditioning, neuronal activity or whatever, then there can be no rational justification for praising or blaming them.
Trust or distrust, approbation or disapprobation, may be emotionally emotionally driven, in which case it cannot be rationally justified. — John
I want a lens or perspective that lets me look at things from "one billiard ball hits another" to "the economy does this" in way that makes those things show up as causal, without necessarily finding some unique single property that they all have.
The best swipe I have at it right now is to say that causation is a tension between those properties of a thing that (more or less) depend on its present context, and those properties of a thing that are (more or less) independent of its present context. — Pneumenon
I think I'd modify this a bit to recognize that there is never not a context to begin with, so that it's no longer a question of 'independence', but of what variety of context is in play. — StreetlightX
This was one of the catalysts for the OP. I'm thinking of the tension between "eternal" laws (e.g. math, physics) and events embedded in time. Becoming, on this view, isn't a "falling away" from Being. It's rather the tension between the ontic and the ontological, to use Heidegger's terminology. Particular vs. universal, general vs. specific. I think of causality as one way that this tension unfolds, the constant working-through and tug back and forth between individual and context. Causality is not a creature of becoming opposed to being, but is the tension between them - or, to shy away from a strict definition, is one way in which that tension "shows up" for us. — Pneumenon
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