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Post a Comment On: Understanding Society

"Causality and metaphysics"

4 Comments -

1 – 4 of 4
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Daniel, Is there any reason to think that anything importation in the empirical study of nature or social life depends on whether one embraces fundamental causal powers, or believes instead that we live in a Humean world?

Its seems to me personally that causal mechanisms can be understood on both pictures, and that causal powers are gratuitous metaphysical baggage.

October 28, 2013 at 7:41 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sorry about the spell check problem. Should have said "anything important in the empirical study, etc."

October 28, 2013 at 9:34 AM

Blogger Jeff Young said...

Causation is an indispensable part of social construction. A politics that thinks it beyond social constructs is just getting a little too big for its own britches.

October 29, 2013 at 3:13 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I will be interested to hear what Dan says. I'd say this: a Hume world is fundamentally inert. Nothing in it is genuinely active. Things might *appear* to be active, as in an "animated" flip book. But - just as in an animated flip book - the activity is not real; rather, it is in fact just a sequence of static states. So the question that you are asking is: "Is a world that is fundamentally static actually different in any important way from a world that contains dynamism." The answer really has to be yes. Don't you think? [Ruth Groff, not really Anonymous]

November 1, 2013 at 11:24 PM

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