What is Causation? | Episode 1511 | Closer To Truth

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  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2024
  • Why does one thing ‘cause’ another thing? Is causation fundamental, primitive, real-not reducible to, or explainable by, anything else? Or is causation a human construct, derivative, artificial? At stake is what existence is about. Featuring interviews with Simon Blackburn, Richard Swinburne, Robin Le Poidevin, Huw Price, and Walter Sinnott-Armstrong.
    Season 15, Episode 11 - #CloserToTruth
    ▶Register for free at CTT.com for subscriber-only exclusives: bit.ly/2GXmFsP
    Closer To Truth host Robert Lawrence Kuhn takes viewers on an intriguing global journey into cutting-edge labs, magnificent libraries, hidden gardens, and revered sanctuaries in order to discover state-of-the-art ideas and make them real and relevant.
    ▶Free access to Closer to Truth's library of 5,000 videos: bit.ly/376lkKN
    Closer to Truth presents the world’s greatest thinkers exploring humanity’s deepest questions. Discover fundamental issues of existence. Engage new and diverse ways of thinking. Appreciate intense debates. Share your own opinions. Seek your own answers.
    #Causation #Existence

Komentáře • 622

  • @jackrabbitism
    @jackrabbitism Před 3 lety +153

    There isn’t really any other series like this. It is an endlessly thought provoking series. It’s very special.

    • @ShowUsTruth
      @ShowUsTruth Před 3 lety +5

      This is the kind which respect the audience minds

    • @koolzjackz8401
      @koolzjackz8401 Před 2 lety +7

      It's in large part to Roberts interviewing skills. He asked such profound questions and has stood toe to toe with...... Everyone. Super inquisitive conversation from Robert. The guy just never disappoints.

    • @seanleith5312
      @seanleith5312 Před 2 lety +2

      What makes someone a philosopher is the ability to talk nonsense endlessly, while every sentence he says is neither obviously right nor wrong.

    • @brandoncrutchfield5201
      @brandoncrutchfield5201 Před 2 lety +2

      I agree, this channel is so good. One thing I think makes it so good is Robert always asks really great questions

    • @bryanmc9174
      @bryanmc9174 Před 2 lety +1

      I had this similar thought before reading this comment. This is a real public service in exposing people to these ideas.

  • @davidr1620
    @davidr1620 Před 4 lety +176

    I've said this before on another one of his videos, but regardless of the wide varieties of disagreement on his videos, can we all agree that Kuhn is one hell of a host? The guy is so well read.

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Před 4 lety

      Hey David... didn't Kuhn write a book himself?

    • @mikebell4649
      @mikebell4649 Před 4 lety +5

      If he can stop using theistic opinions just to grab a wider audience he would be taken more seriously! He wants a big tent n sacrifices epistemology n truth

    • @mikebell4649
      @mikebell4649 Před 4 lety

      Why dont u ask him to Demonstrate how he know ure god makes choices and who told him! Presuppositional !

    • @davidr1620
      @davidr1620 Před 4 lety +22

      @@mikebell4649 Why would he and should he be so prejudicial in his investigation? Especially since a great number of modern philosophers are theists. I think getting a wide variety of opinions and considering them is a sign of intellectual maturity.
      And this is especially true given that Kuhn has stated on multiple occasions that the existence of God and the possibility of an afterlife is one of the subjects that troubles him most of all the deep questions.

    • @davidr1620
      @davidr1620 Před 4 lety +3

      @@mikebell4649 ...what?

  • @nicoboer
    @nicoboer Před 4 lety +63

    I love the fact that "Closer to Truth" is provided freely on CZcams (and without ADs).. the series brings up great questions that trigger more and more questions!!.. Curiosity is the base of learning, and to have this for free open doors for people to learn and ask more all around the world.
    The main problem is how to bring this kind of stuff to more people, a youtuber talking about whatever gets more views than these type of series.

    • @sirluoyi2853
      @sirluoyi2853 Před 3 lety

      Join this WhatsApp group for Philosophical discussions...
      👇
      Link: chat.whatsapp.com/IibF9JUazRF9IExVk5Qmh1

    • @melgross
      @melgross Před 3 lety +2

      There are Ads now.

    • @canyoubeserious
      @canyoubeserious Před 2 lety +1

      Without ads? What? The way I’m watching they are relentlessly mercilessly appearing.

    • @l.h.308
      @l.h.308 Před rokem

      Adblock removes them! It's free (donations appreciated)

  • @vivekmg2300
    @vivekmg2300 Před 3 lety +6

    closer to truth has become my bedtime story. I go to sleep listening to one of the videos

  • @paxdriver
    @paxdriver Před rokem +3

    If reality tv were replaced by Closer To Truth I don't think the world's politics would look anything like the circus we see today. This sort of programming is such an understated benefit to the species. Very work Dr Kuhn 👍

  • @maspoetry1
    @maspoetry1 Před 3 lety +5

    the only fact this guy is a noble searcher makes me smile for him. great person

  • @gustavodeoliveira702
    @gustavodeoliveira702 Před 4 lety +51

    Extraordinary content! This is what CZcams need.

    • @sirluoyi2853
      @sirluoyi2853 Před 3 lety

      Join this WhatsApp group for Philosophical discussions...
      👇
      Link: chat.whatsapp.com/IibF9JUazRF9IExVk5Qmh1

    • @theclassicfan7002
      @theclassicfan7002 Před 2 lety +1

      couldnt agree with u more

    • @gustavodeoliveira702
      @gustavodeoliveira702 Před 2 lety

      @@sirluoyi2853 You still host a whatsapp group?

  • @DrGooseDuckman
    @DrGooseDuckman Před 2 lety +6

    New to this series and digging it. IMHO it's draw is it's genuine curiosity, and the excitement encircling it. That's really tough to fake. The host, ofc is a perfect conductor for all this.

  • @mentuemhet
    @mentuemhet Před 4 lety +76

    i don't understand why your videos aren't getting millions of views.

    • @Bldyiii
      @Bldyiii Před 4 lety +6

      Doctor Who 2002 Cause & Effect. I drank too much wine, and now must take a piss.

    • @mentuemhet
      @mentuemhet Před 4 lety +1

      @@Bldyiii lol, the matrix 😁

    • @nastyHarry
      @nastyHarry Před 4 lety +14

      people would rather watch mindless entertainment like fat guys chugging 10 gallons of coke. Thinking is hard work

    • @lifeisshortpeace7783
      @lifeisshortpeace7783 Před 3 lety +4

      Only those interested in ultimate truth will watch,but most people is interested satisfying their sensual needs.

    • @rogermouton2273
      @rogermouton2273 Před 3 lety +6

      people en masse are insufficiently intelligent

  • @reason2463
    @reason2463 Před 4 lety +18

    In 2001, I had a very real motor cycle accident. It resulted in some permanent damage to my right leg. Since then I am reminded every minute of my life that causation is very real indeed and not just a mental construct.

    • @kevinsayes
      @kevinsayes Před rokem +1

      Sorry about your leg, truly. But stating an example of exactly what is being debated doesn’t move the needle at all

    • @Littleprinceleon
      @Littleprinceleon Před rokem

      Sorry for that...
      Technically it was some specific chain of events (only part of what can be called "the accident") that lead to the damage.
      I hope that something could be learned from those events that helps others and also that you can still lead a life worthy to live.
      I have a HUGE RESPECT for each kind of activity that involves things faster than a fast ride on bicycle.
      We've been playing once with a cheap, very HARD frisbee, which was capable of flying rather long distances if thrown with enough POWER. It was me who threw it mostly along the lowest path possible, as that was the most efficient. For reasons, we stood on a hillside, and changed positions, so it wasn't trivial to find the best path.
      Once I threw it in such direction that a boy standing closer to me, than the intended "target", could intervene. So he attempted to catch the damn thing but it was SPINNING VERY VIGOROUSLY and since it was somewhat sharp at its circumference, he instantly pulled away his hand. That sturdy, energetic frisbee hit him right in the head and resulted in such a wound as if hit by a stone. So the cheerful game had an awfully BLOODY END.
      Of course this can't be compared to most of the traffic accidents. What I'd like to HIGHLIGHT is: I knew that frisbee the most, as it was mine and played with it a lot.
      I think most of the players realised it's unusually dangerous properties (I even urged them to be careful) but they had LIMITED EXPERIENCE with it.
      I threw it sometimes the MOST HARD because I was able to aim it precisely and knew that after the given distance it will loose enough energy to be safely catched.
      However after a while we all got "enchanted" and many of us tried the limits (that's what puberty is about, eh?!).
      When more participants of any potentially harmful activity start to loose carefulness also alertness (due to tiredness) then the circumstances can change more quickly than awaited:
      accident is bound to happen.
      If I'm not mistaken: majority of motorcycle riders don't get involved in serious accidents (?)
      What are the major causes that lead to more drastic outcomes?
      On aikido lessons we spent a lot of time, a huge effort went into learning HOW TO FALL. Are there similar trainings for motorbike raiders? Is that even possible to prepare (a bit) in advance?
      If that opens up too painful memories, please ignore my comment

  • @TheLlywelyn
    @TheLlywelyn Před 3 lety +1

    Firstly - taken together, Mr Kuhn, these many chapters of Closer to the Truth constitute one of the most profound philosophical explorations of our time (i actually can't think of a comparable work in print of this scope.) In pushing into some of the deepest questions of existence - you tease out and weave together connections across disciplines, across world views, across perspectives - and all the time simply exposing the competing threads to allow us to see how they lie. You respect those you interview, and you respect your listeners. You meet with great minds and ask many of the questions I want to ask, and so many more I wouldn't have thought to ask. (Secondly - am I the only one who is, of course, at once impressed by these great minds - but then equally surprised at how many demonstrate an underlying almost emotive commitment to their own presuppositions about reality by sometimes presenting as sureties the More Speculative Ideas (eg, multiverse, backwards causation) alongside those Things More Verified as if they are the same?

  • @SpittinSquirell
    @SpittinSquirell Před 3 lety +11

    I love this series but the more episodes I watch the more I realize that we actually know very little. There are very few absolute truths if any, and I wouldn't be surprised if in 300+ years people look back at our time and are amazed at what we believed and thought was true.

    • @donteatthepaint8412
      @donteatthepaint8412 Před 2 lety +1

      Try 50.

    • @jakecostanza802
      @jakecostanza802 Před 2 lety

      I have the same feeling when I hear songs from the 80's

    • @louisbullard6135
      @louisbullard6135 Před rokem +1

      Interesting and I mostly agree. I know most people think we will become increasingly advanced in the future but I often wonder could we regress. Could we lose even our current technology and have to start over. I am not sure I could start a fire without a match and that scares the hell out of me!!!

    • @deandsouza
      @deandsouza Před rokem

      I agree a bit. But these are deep questions and I feel that our understanding of the natural world has increased a lot since I was a kid.

  • @davidanthony6408
    @davidanthony6408 Před 2 lety +11

    All of my life I have been concerned with the meaning of things, identifying them, how things work and why, and entity relationships, etc. This made me feel like I wasn't as smart as other people because I never see others bothered by not knowing enough. I eventually learned that most people do not like to think and would rather fake it till they make it. I guess I wasn't really behind, I was just more curious and honest about my level of understanding in the interest of welcoming more understanding.

    • @alwaysgreatusa223
      @alwaysgreatusa223 Před 2 lety +2

      The surest sign of intelligence is curiosity, whereas surest sign of stupidity is disinterestedness.

    • @duaneholcomb8408
      @duaneholcomb8408 Před 2 lety

      Me too I'm interested in many things. I can't do them all. Not time enough dont live long enough. I've always knew for some time now about the law of cause and effect. Einstein used it. To discover ever thing he ever knew without it nothing can be known about any thing. I'm a very curious person.
      I suppose. ,,,

    • @casudemous5105
      @casudemous5105 Před 2 lety

      The things is all of these smart people arent sure of their "intelligence". I assume like most smart people they doubt they are. The difference is that they are people that have done thing i.e they jumped

    • @steveodavis9486
      @steveodavis9486 Před rokem

      Kuhn makes you think, whatever that is. Curiosity is for people who like to think, dogma is for lazy,disinterested people who enjoy being satisfied with group values.

  • @pamalogy
    @pamalogy Před rokem +1

    Way to go Lawrence. Another very well done episode. I deeply admire your work.

  • @domcasmurro2417
    @domcasmurro2417 Před 4 lety +31

    I envy your life, mister Kuhn. Wish i could engage in conservations with so many interesting persons from all areas.

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Před 4 lety +7

      Hey Dom.. I feel the same. But I'm pretty simple-minded so I don't think my conversation with these people would get very far.

    • @domcasmurro2417
      @domcasmurro2417 Před 4 lety +5

      @@johnbrzykcy3076 Well, tbh i would need to improve a lot to talk with many of these people.

    • @terrywbreedlove
      @terrywbreedlove Před 4 lety +4

      You can now easier than ever with social media etc. People like Dr Brian Green has e a weekly show and he answers questions.

    • @xspotbox4400
      @xspotbox4400 Před 4 lety

      @@terrywbreedlove Those popular scientists doesn't really answer question, only referee to what they already explained. There are other channels when young researchers and scientists explore their thought models, they do care what community want to know and do repply to every single comment. Greene is a good professor, but he wont waste time with amateurs and risk loosing credibility due to some stupid question he can't really explain.

    • @domcasmurro2417
      @domcasmurro2417 Před 4 lety

      @@xspotbox4400 Brian Greene is doing the Daily Equation show at the World Science Festival in the last weeks. They have some Q&A videos there.

  • @ishevel
    @ishevel Před 3 lety +1

    Thanx! Such an interesting and under-covered topic. Your video provides insights into causation at different angles.

  • @AkashThomas99
    @AkashThomas99 Před 2 lety +2

    Great host, amazing production quality.

  • @waltmoyo3700
    @waltmoyo3700 Před 2 lety +1

    This is now my favorite CZcams channel, along with World Science Festival.

  • @rebellion54678
    @rebellion54678 Před 4 lety +15

    Very enlightening ! thank you for this brilliant content.

  • @candidachii
    @candidachii Před 3 lety

    thank u for making this video it helps me in my research!

  • @dougwiles7639
    @dougwiles7639 Před 3 lety +2

    You couldn't get me to listen to my 11th grade English teacher. At 53 years of age I can't get enough of this.

  • @FM-lo9vv
    @FM-lo9vv Před rokem +2

    Amazing content, but I must say, the production value is also pretty darn good! Such nice shots, what a delight to watch!! :)

  • @EcoTHEgrey
    @EcoTHEgrey Před 3 lety

    Knowledge very well explained!

  • @Jonnygurudesigns
    @Jonnygurudesigns Před 2 lety

    Quality top tier conversations... this is the place to come too

  • @4everVillas
    @4everVillas Před 2 lety +3

    It's a shame the program didn't interview statisticians who have puzzled over the concept of causation, determinism, and probability for more than 100 years.

    • @hkumar7340
      @hkumar7340 Před 2 lety +1

      Right! Especially, the Granddaddy of them all -- Judea Pearl. His books, "Causality: Models, Reasoning and Inference" (for the expert) and "The Book of Why" (for the layman) are the last word on this subject for now.

    • @terryboland3816
      @terryboland3816 Před rokem +1

      They'd be dead by now.

  • @ramosthomas9414
    @ramosthomas9414 Před 2 lety

    Keep asking the hardest of questions my brother for all of us we listening

  • @ajithkumarg3219
    @ajithkumarg3219 Před 3 lety +1

    This is exactly what I needed to hear while learning Newtonian mechanics.
    Thank you very much for the content ♥️♥️♥️

  • @assiah71
    @assiah71 Před 4 lety

    Just wow ! Clarity at it best

  • @weaseldragon
    @weaseldragon Před 4 lety

    Best apologetics channel on CZcams!

  • @AlfredoMazzinghi
    @AlfredoMazzinghi Před 4 lety +5

    Great video for a great topic. Thanks Mr. Kuhn for being such a great host! I'd be extremely interested about the same topic seen from a physics point of view.

  • @mustafaelbahi7979
    @mustafaelbahi7979 Před 4 lety +1

    I like the concept of causation, a certain strength of causation that led to the emergence of the world instead of its destruction. This is what we call believers, the uncaused cause or the Lord.

  • @dennistucker1153
    @dennistucker1153 Před 4 lety

    I love this subject and this video. Thank you CTT.

  • @richardmarker786
    @richardmarker786 Před 4 lety

    The subject of causation provides the very crux of discovering "bedrock reality". I would love to be able to discuss this with Kuhn. Unfortunately, such a discussion to be of value would almost certainly take more of his time than he would be willing to spare. There exists a fundamental causal mechanism that starts with "something" that has no physical characteristics; and with "nothing" that is absent even the fabric of space itself. It took many decades of pursuing this causal mechanism to arrive at a definitive relationship of such precision to know the path was more than simply a curious exercise in logic.
    Thank you for a superb video!

  • @Slimm2240
    @Slimm2240 Před 4 lety +2

    This channel is underated

  • @mondopinion3777
    @mondopinion3777 Před 2 lety +1

    "Time is the downhill slope of God's intent, and cause is the joint of flow."

  • @daithiocinnsealach3173
    @daithiocinnsealach3173 Před 4 lety +1

    This is why I am subscribed to this channel. For topics like this.
    Swinburne rarely looks you in the eye. I'm the exact same. It's not that common. It's often a trait of shyness it seems.
    Kuhn has very straight shoulders. Swinburne's right shoulder slants at quite a noticeable angle.

  • @julianmann6172
    @julianmann6172 Před 2 lety +1

    Backward causation also resolves freewill V Determinism. Both concepts apply but one is in backward time and the other in forward time. So there is duality on this level.

    • @adriancioroianu1704
      @adriancioroianu1704 Před rokem

      ?? determinism doesn't "become" free will by inverting the arrow of causation and time, it's still determinism. you just perceive it psychologically as free will if you want.

  • @dag410
    @dag410 Před rokem

    Outstanding

  • @dennisalwine4519
    @dennisalwine4519 Před 4 lety

    One of the best CTT episodes!

  • @ameremortal
    @ameremortal Před 4 lety

    In my opinion, this is one of the most important questions. It’s something we can actually study.

    • @demiurge1608
      @demiurge1608 Před 4 lety

      Amere Mortal you can not study it. by definition, the tool you would use to study is science which is based on the cause and effect. So, it would not be an objective quest for truth. does it make sense ?

    • @sirluoyi2853
      @sirluoyi2853 Před 3 lety +1

      Join this WhatsApp group for Philosophical discussions...
      👇
      Link: chat.whatsapp.com/IibF9JUazRF9IExVk5Qmh1

    • @ameremortal
      @ameremortal Před 3 lety +1

      @@demiurge1608 It does, unfortunately.

  • @cofa4011
    @cofa4011 Před 4 lety

    Beautifull ! Thank you for your work and the upload !

  • @jozsefnemeth935
    @jozsefnemeth935 Před 2 lety +3

    Enlightening. Thank you. the examples about the dollar etc work well. Backward causation seems absurd. Changing the notion of space seems less problematic as explained in another video of the series.

    • @slay2525
      @slay2525 Před 2 lety

      If Reality is just an amorphous 4d blob of past present and future simultaneously, the vector of time is not necessarily a single direction waxing or waning. Think about reality as a dvd and your body as a meat sack rendition of a DVD player that experiences reality moment to moment. Then remove the meat sack and just take in the dvd. Retro causation maybe easier to comprehend as not really causation

    • @Littleprinceleon
      @Littleprinceleon Před rokem

      @@slay2525 what makes any of us able to decide on whatever if future already exists?
      Sorry, one has to peek into what kinds of experiments are done in QM (eg. a bunch of quantum particles showing non-intuitive probability distributions, or the wave like behaviour of matter particles strongly limited by the mass of the system, it's not that long that systems able to re-cohere are studied ...): QM with all the fields and special dynamics is nowhere near to full understanding of even the simplest systems...
      Once you start to develop a solid grasp on basic concepts, suddenly you realize how far stretched are many of even the basic interpretations of the measurement problem, not speaking about the extrapolations they make.
      What the heck is a conscious system in a block universe anyway?

    • @slay2525
      @slay2525 Před rokem

      @@Littleprinceleon A conscious system would be the "meat sack" we dwell in. The difficulty in comprehending this is very apparent. I came to a point in undergrad when I just could not advance in mathmatics and physics. I'm 58 now, I could go further in those subjects now with greater maturity, but that's not realistically happening. I'm happy to be superficial, I know enough to know that I don't know, but enough to know that the body of knowledge is incomplete. A reverse dunning-kruger at best.

  • @aclearlight
    @aclearlight Před 2 lety +2

    Another beautiful, elevated, uplifting inquiry, and a lovely bit of vicarious world travel to boot. Your channel ROCKS!

  • @hgracern
    @hgracern Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent, thanks. No time, no cause. No cause, no beginning. Maybe.

  • @micatlan
    @micatlan Před 4 lety +1

    Great videos, Robert. Thank you much.

  • @robotaholic
    @robotaholic Před rokem

    Holy wow at 4 and a half minutes in and this guest is awesome. I'm having one of those moments when you're like who is this guy! I've gotta find more

  • @davidgalbraith7367
    @davidgalbraith7367 Před 3 lety

    causation is our way of attributing purpose to the world in a scientific age.

  • @perfectionbox
    @perfectionbox Před 4 lety +1

    Patterns of events are mandatory for consciousness to function. Observers will always find themselves in a causal reality.

  • @olbluelips
    @olbluelips Před 2 lety

    Enjoyed this! But are there really 1500 episodes?!

  • @firstal3799
    @firstal3799 Před 2 lety

    Causation as asked here is best described as an inexorable and all encompassing chain of events.

  • @alwaysgreatusa223
    @alwaysgreatusa223 Před 2 lety

    Laws of nature are not patterns of things, rather they are the essence of things !

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 Před 3 lety +1

    Causation is one thing / will adding a new experience to another thing / will.

  • @Nickelodeon81
    @Nickelodeon81 Před 2 lety

    Q "Can't we just all get along??"
    A "That would violate causation."

  • @johnpayne7873
    @johnpayne7873 Před 2 lety +1

    Just beautiful, Robert!
    My thoughts:
    If experience is wired to the phenomenon of causation and (Aristotlean) logic - our most reliable tool for studying experience - fundamentally embeds cause through the construct of propositional statements, aren’t we trapped in desconstructing the nature of cause?

    • @caricue
      @caricue Před 2 lety +1

      I really liked this video myself. My conclusion is that the concept of causation is being used backwards in many cases. It is very helpful and enlightening to look for causes to explain observations or experiences, but you get in trouble when you take these imagined "causes" and try to use them to judge nature. What you observe or experience is assumed to exist, but your explanation is just an opinion that is subject to being revised or rejected based on new data.

  • @stevekane8609
    @stevekane8609 Před 2 lety +1

    It's much easier to make the case that causation is an illusion than it is to make the case that consciousness is an illusion.

  • @derektomko1015
    @derektomko1015 Před 4 lety

    I follow all of the concepts in this wonderful series, however I dont understand this particular subject one bit

    • @slay2525
      @slay2525 Před 2 lety

      In law school many of my peers struggled with causation as an element of negligence and all it’s permutations in the legal world.

  • @JeffChen285
    @JeffChen285 Před 4 lety +1

    Causality is a fundamental nature of mental logic. Without it, mountain goats will jump off cliffs without hesitation. In other words, the phenomenon of life shall be characterized as causal purpose, not only purpose. Nature laws shall have their own full-scale causalities, not necessarily be fully compatible with human mental causality though. Therefore, using terms such as pattern to deny the causality of the physical world is self-deceiving.

  • @markheller197
    @markheller197 Před 4 lety +13

    Seemed like a Monty Python skit.

    • @0626love
      @0626love Před 4 lety

      haha

    • @tilik13
      @tilik13 Před 4 lety

      philosophers (aka b.s. artists) are only good for Monty Python skits.

    • @eucariote79
      @eucariote79 Před 3 lety +5

      @@tilik13 so you did not understand a thing.

    • @tilik13
      @tilik13 Před 3 lety +1

      @@eucariote79 why do you think so, mimzi?

    • @concernedcitizen780
      @concernedcitizen780 Před 2 lety

      I’m not sure what caused me to watch this.

  • @earthjustice01
    @earthjustice01 Před rokem

    Excellent move to come back to the theist/atheist divide to understand the divide between seeing causality as a fundamental or seeing it as derivative from human experience. Think of Aristotle's four kinds of cause - formal, efficient, material, and final -... These are four different ways of framing the world to focus on what is really significant or basic in it. What things are made of, what their "essence" is, what brought them into existence, or what purpose was behind it happening. You could say that these describe the four basic ways that we (Aristotle, not me) look at everything. As far as causal processes go, why single out any particular series of events rather than another, and why stop with a cause and effect when the whole structure of causation stretches out to infinity in every direction? Any parsing of reality to understand or explain it must be from a human perception, until such time as we encounter intelligent aliens. I side with Blackburn and the Humeans.

  • @hamzahbakouni6208
    @hamzahbakouni6208 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks. Maybe one need a unifying quantum gravity theory to better depict reality and understand causation, whether it is a fundamental element of reality or a one among other mental constructs.

  • @lalsenarath
    @lalsenarath Před 9 měsíci +1

    Causation is also probability! Let me explain. When you throw a stone at the window, the window always breaks is wrong! most probably it will break, out of many other things that can happen. It can be shown better the striking of a billiard ball, we provide a smooth top for the ball to roll, the table is well prepaired, the ball is perfectly round, ... etc. etc. So as humans we have prepaired the situation by minimising the probabilty of other things happening. But not all, a pilot training an air plan might crash on the building! We always tend to forget that the place of the experiment is carefully prepared by the experimenter to minimize the probability!

  • @HeliumXenonKrypton
    @HeliumXenonKrypton Před 4 lety

    How can I buy these videos on DVD ?

  • @putjack3703
    @putjack3703 Před 3 měsíci

    the beginning of causality seems to be mystery, but who knows it came from mystery

  • @stevenmartinellimusic
    @stevenmartinellimusic Před 2 lety

    I have some great examples of overdetermination that actually happened to me in fairly close succession.

  • @jmzorko
    @jmzorko Před 3 lety

    One of the best things about CTT is that, for every episode about total bunk ideas like ESP and whether it exists or not, there are at least a dozen episodes, like this one, about _far_ more worthy and interesting questions.

  • @billybhoy32
    @billybhoy32 Před 2 lety

    What is the piece of music called at the start?

  • @muhammadirfanislami818
    @muhammadirfanislami818 Před 2 lety +1

    Hope we can perceive arguments of causation from statistician too

  • @malayangrago5628
    @malayangrago5628 Před 2 lety

    Better than cable tv.

  • @UTArch1
    @UTArch1 Před 2 lety

    Isn't this question the modern equivalent of "How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?"

  • @deandsouza
    @deandsouza Před rokem

    Love this series. I wish that for this episode, however, he would discuss causation with a scientist such as theoretical physicist Sean Carroll. But really nice hearing all these different perspectives.

  • @aaron2709
    @aaron2709 Před 2 lety

    Good one.

  • @DistortedV12
    @DistortedV12 Před 4 lety +1

    Causation can be formally described by mathematics, it is a model that is able to predict the effect of interventions or a prediction model that correctly adjusts for confounders. No philosophical speculation is needed or theist vs atheist concepts.

    • @nicolasargon1436
      @nicolasargon1436 Před 4 lety

      Can you say more? Or point to resources that explain this more thoroughly? I'm very interested!

  • @2000yearOldYogiAspirant

    I wonder if Rupert Spira has ever been on 'Closer to Truth' and if not I'd like seeing it

  • @TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns

    Introducing backward causation doesn’t undermine *causation;* it undermines the uni-directionality of time. But the very idea of backward causation presupposes causation. It’s in the name lol.
    Causation is a subcategory of explanation, a category we can’t get rid of per certain formulation of PSR, which Ed Feser defends brilliantly in his 2017 “Five Proofs” book (in the chapter on the Rationalist Proof).

    • @TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns
      @TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns Před 2 lety

      Ps. I know that Feser denies backward causation, but he’s just wrong about that. It’s not merely theoretical, as there’s experimental evidence for it! But his case for PSR remains solid.

  • @kimsahl8555
    @kimsahl8555 Před 3 lety

    Causation is a potential going to a realization and a realization going to a potential.

  • @9Ballr
    @9Ballr Před 4 lety +2

    It's not clear that Hume is a skeptic about the metaphysics of causation, but he is a skeptic about our knowledge of causation, because he thinks that we cannot properly ground our claim that there is a necessary connection between causes and their effects in sense experience.

    • @davibro
      @davibro Před rokem

      Yeah, I was wondering about that as well. How do you think it could be grounded?

  • @dinaray2025
    @dinaray2025 Před 3 lety

    Start sharing his channel!

  • @followyourbliss973
    @followyourbliss973 Před 5 měsíci +1

    A basebal breaks a window, it makes a loud noise, people come out to see what happened, somebody gets in trouble, somebody feels guilty, the glass must be ckeaned up, the window must be repaired, the repair costs money, somebody has to pay, somebody learns a lesson, on and on and on!

  • @discogodfather22
    @discogodfather22 Před 4 lety +1

    Causation is a concept based on time, which is still the least talked about or well defined concept in physics. No one has seen or proposed a subatomic carrier particle for time or an intrinsic field theory. Ask a physicist what time is and they will give you a series of indirect answers. "Timespace" is usually the accepted concept., which analyzes the geometry of it, but nothing else. What is time specifically? If it's the thing we are all confused about and hung up on, maybe as a construct of reality that doesn't exist, maybe this explains causality. If everything happens at once in reality, there is no need for time, and no need for causes.

  • @ledgermanager
    @ledgermanager Před 2 lety +1

    a new thought ;
    you do know the max speed = the transfer(or transmission) rate of causality
    so all that goes slower then the speed of light is under the same hood, bound to causality..
    then there is a gap, the size of a (maybe that famous)
    planck length, that any 'causal tick'(lack of better word) has to jump before it gives you that transmission .
    it has to buildup tension to jump that gap, thats why black holes are weird, gaps are gone, no jumps whatsoever all is one big soup of causal incoherence

  • @goranjohansson2495
    @goranjohansson2495 Před 2 lety

    Causation is the development of a dynamical system from one state to another governed by the evaluation rules of that particular system

  • @johnbrzykcy3076
    @johnbrzykcy3076 Před 4 lety

    "the necessity lies in ourselves rather than in the events." Very interesting. Also "backwards causation" is a deeply challenging idea. Has anyone read about these theories?

    • @delq
      @delq Před 4 lety

      I think causation is delusional - backwards or forwards. When you think about it, the illusion of causation can be pretty much summed up in a couple of perceptions we have evolved as humans, for example if we hold a glass and be at the verge of deciding wether to drop and break it or to not drop it and still have the glass and in such a situation it feels like the fate of the glass ie broken or not is entirely at our disposal and our alone even though the glass could simply break (can) without we doing anything. Also it adds more importance or substance to our decision the fact that we know from experience really well that droping it would definitely break it and wont otherewise, even when that too is totally possible.

    • @BuddyLee23
      @BuddyLee23 Před 4 lety

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retrocausality

  • @dottedrhino
    @dottedrhino Před 3 lety

    I agree largely with mr. Armstrong. In fact, I thought exactly these things out and now I hear mr. Armstrong saying them. :)

  • @mikedziuba8617
    @mikedziuba8617 Před 4 lety +1

    Causation is basically making something happen. Which requires some kind of a mechanism that connects the cause and effect this way.
    Sometimes this causal mechanism is very simple and straightforward. But more often, effects have multiple causes and very complicated mechanisms that connect each cause to the effect.
    You can find all kinds of patterns in event sequences using statistical correlations. But most of such correlations don't have a causal relationship, even though one follows the other in time. Because quite often, there is some third hidden cause that first causes the first event and then the second.
    That's why people say correlation isn't causation. So, just finding a sequence pattern doesn't necessarily mean that there is a causal relationship between the first event and the second.
    To establish a causal relationship, you need to describe a mechanism of how one event causes the other. And you need to show beyond reasonable doubt this mechanism exists and it works the way you say it works.
    "How?" is the question any claim of a causal relationship must answer. Because if you don't describe and explain the mechanism of how it happens, then there is no way to tell if your pattern is just a correlation, or if it has a causal relationship. It's the mechanism that establishes the causal relationship.
    So, it's no so much a question of whether causation exists. It's a question of whether a mechanism exists that enables one event to cause another. And this question you can answer only through scientific investigations for each seeming cause and effect.

    • @jrd33
      @jrd33 Před 4 lety +1

      Good post, but science assumes causation. It can't investigate it, by definition.

    • @mikedziuba8617
      @mikedziuba8617 Před 4 lety

      When you describe the mechanism of how one event makes another event happen and show beyond reasonable doubt that this mechanism exists and it works like this in every experiment, then this is experimental evidence and not an assumption.
      An assumption is when you make an untestable and an unfalsifiable statement and assume that it's true. But this clearly isn't the case when describe a mechanism of how one event makes another event happen, and show with various experiments that this mechanism actually exists and it works the way you say it works. Because if this mechanism doesn't exist or doesn't work the way you say it works, then the experiments will show it. And other people can test it too independently of you.
      Perhaps the problem here isn't the answer. The problem is the question. It's a badly worded question that uses an abstract word which doesn't describe what exactly it is that you are looking for.
      Albert Einstein once said, “ If I had an hour to solve a problem and my life depended on the solution, I would spend the first 55 minutes determining the proper question to ask, for once I know the proper question, I could solve the problem in less than five minutes.”
      www.gurteen.com/gurteen/gurteen.nsf/id/determining-the-proper-question
      I think you can remove the word 'causation' and just talk about one event making another event happen through some kind of a mechanism that can be tested and shown to work in various experiments. And then you don't have any philosophical dilemma to worry about. It's just a mundane scientific question about whether one event plays a role in making another event happen or not.

  • @Ndo01
    @Ndo01 Před 4 lety +4

    If there's no time then everything that has, is, or ever will happen, exists at once. Causation then could just be a matter of perspective, dependant on which sequence is viewed in a particular order. Humans view things 'forward', but there could be infinite degrees and possible pathways to sequence every event that already exists.

    • @organicalgorithms
      @organicalgorithms Před 4 lety +2

      Nando N I agree. Also is a perspective of being outside time that you could (theoretically) view all of space-time, past and present at once. And as you say, it’s all about perspective.

    • @alwaysgreatusa223
      @alwaysgreatusa223 Před 2 lety

      "At once" already presupposes the existence of time. What does 'once' mean except at a single time?

    • @alwaysgreatusa223
      @alwaysgreatusa223 Před 2 lety

      The imagination can imagine a million things, if you only allow it by ignoring any contradictions.

    • @Ndo01
      @Ndo01 Před 2 lety

      @@alwaysgreatusa223 Semantics. Sure, you could say that 'at once' means at a single 'time', but the word 'time' here is just used to reference and juxtapose the common use and understanding of time to be flowing. Where time is static, and not flowing, relative to the common grasp of it, it would be reasonable to say that there would be no time there, which could also be referred to as static time.

    • @alwaysgreatusa223
      @alwaysgreatusa223 Před 2 lety

      @@Ndo01The idea that things happen in no time having passed is absurd. It's not just words, it's concepts that are the issue here. To speak of time as being static is to destroy the concept of time by making it unintelligible.

  • @arekk.9266
    @arekk.9266 Před rokem

    Hello. Very good series indeed. From me observations about causation I may add, for your consideration, a concept of End of Time, and the idea of Circular, Loop type of causation, which I call the Real Discovery of a Wheel. Events repeat themselves and effects become causes. Like the Uroburos snake. Consider this...

  • @dondreytaylor8001
    @dondreytaylor8001 Před 3 lety +2

    Each explanation of causation that was given in this all sound convincing- I'm so confused lol

    • @cristianm7097
      @cristianm7097 Před 2 lety

      A circular labyrinth of words.

    • @cristianm7097
      @cristianm7097 Před 2 lety

      @Geegee Poo Not necessarily. The humans' comprehension of reality might be inherently limited, while reality can still be real, not a sim

  • @kimsahl8555
    @kimsahl8555 Před 3 lety

    Causation is the alternation between a state and a state change.

  • @markuspfeifer8473
    @markuspfeifer8473 Před 2 lety +1

    Causation is an effective language that turns a description of the universe of the form "t -> X" into the form "e -> (X -> X)". The former is great when you try to answer how a system evolves in general, the latter is great when you try to answer how events or actions affect the evolution. The former is like having a computer program that is completely evaluated at compile time and presented to the user as some kind of movie, the latter provides an interface to the user so the user can interact with the program (which necessarily means that some parts are evaluated at runtime). The former tries to be objective and assumes a passive observer, the latter is somewhat subjective and permits an active experimentator. The former allows for continuous time, the latter inherently has time quantized into events.

  • @gr33nDestiny
    @gr33nDestiny Před 4 lety

    Geez, the weather is really bad here

  • @HeliumXenonKrypton
    @HeliumXenonKrypton Před 3 lety

    To understand causation you must first do this. Assume that the discrete set {0,1} and the continuous open interval (0,1) are Equivalent, in the same philosophical sense as Relativity. As soon as you make this assumption, you obtain the mathematical and philosophical tools which are necessary to understand causation, and you will immediately understand it. This video is really quite excellent and all of the people are clearly very smart and well read but in fact they are going around in circles with no end. The only way to possess truth is by letting go of it and then it will be yours. We cannot know if the universe is deterministic or stochastic, it is profoundly indeterminate. Either of these may be validly assumed and this creates the illusion that one or the other must be correct, but this line of reason is actually exactly 1/2 wrong because both are equally valid. Causation can be modelled deterministically, or stochastically. Both are simultaneously valid because the Equivalence mentioned above creates a profound ambiguity ... and that's why both are simultaneously valid. As soon as this is realized, modelling makes more sense and the whole thing is easily solvable. Once this is understood, you will have arrived at truth, a truth which does not exist due to a kind of profound incompleteness, a profound ambiguity which is inherent to spacetime and all of reality. You're welcome.

  • @firstal3799
    @firstal3799 Před 2 lety +1

    Good duscussion

  • @projectmalus
    @projectmalus Před 4 lety

    I think that causation as humans perceive it is a construct, but animals that are close to us in size or cognitive capacity have this capability. It's the level at which patterns manifest to us. See it as the screen on a spectrum analyzer, the peaks and dips of energy are displayed, and humans see part of this. At our level the part we see is manifested over and over, but the "causal" bits are merely a segment of the overall pattern, the leading edge of the sine wave as it were. At a higher or lower level it might seem quite different.

  • @Anders01
    @Anders01 Před rokem

    I was surprised to learn that causation is still an unsolved problem in philosophy and in physics. My guess is that causality is nondual in the sense that it's reality as a whole, like the block universe idea that includes all time both past and future, that is the cause of events. This is different than the usual Laplacian version where causality is a result of only past events.

  • @djayjp
    @djayjp Před 3 měsíci

    "A dollar is an abstract thing." Riiiiiight....

  • @realnumber9show326
    @realnumber9show326 Před 3 lety

    Every cause has an effect! This is a universal law

    • @rohmann000
      @rohmann000 Před 2 lety

      Yes, but this is a rather trivial observation; the relevant and important question is why it is supposedly a universal law, and on what grounds it can be so described, discovered, or conceived.

  • @TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns

    “You can’t have memory without neural pathways.”
    Presupposes a reductive physicalism, which isn’t obviously true.

    • @danielbrown97
      @danielbrown97 Před 2 lety

      he means biomemory, i.e. a neural mapping mechanism, not information stored on silicon chips

    • @TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns
      @TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns Před 2 lety

      @@danielbrown97 it’s not obviously true that memories are “stored” in brain pathways either.

    • @danielbrown97
      @danielbrown97 Před 2 lety

      @@TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns indeed, not "stored" in neural networks, but accessible via them

    • @TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns
      @TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns Před 2 lety

      @@danielbrown97 Thanks for clarifying.
      *Only* accessible via those pathways?

    • @danielbrown97
      @danielbrown97 Před 2 lety

      @@TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns i suppose it's possible that each and every neuron in the human brain could be replaced with an artificial neuron, thus simulating human action-perception loops using silicon. on that view, a non-bio system may experience recall like we do (i.e. as internal visuospatial simulations or quasi-linguistic abstractions)
      however, in reality, it is difficult to imagine building such a system which has a similar phenomenological profile to humans. intuitively biomemory does seem to me distinct from other conceptions of memory, but i suppose non-bio is at least conceivable? does that dissatisfy you?

  • @TheBruces56
    @TheBruces56 Před 4 lety +1

    I remember once hearing that the speed of light isn't about velocity so much as it is the speed of "causality". I don't think I understand it.

    • @TactileTherapy
      @TactileTherapy Před 4 lety

      it means that the rate at which an event can occur is the speed 300,000 km a second. Light just also happens to travel at that speed. So does gravity waves. So does energy. No event (beginning to end) can occur faster than that.

    • @helensmith7596
      @helensmith7596 Před 4 lety +1

      @@TactileTherapy light doesn't travel. Its a field perturbation

  • @partydean17
    @partydean17 Před 3 lety +1

    I need a video on probability. I do not understand it and it drives me crazy. Why are things random?!

  • @stephenlawrence4821
    @stephenlawrence4821 Před rokem

    Well the future does change the past in a sense. The future will be different depending on whether I do A or B. But what we forget (and many deny) is the past was also different depending on whether I do A or B.
    Dependent connections definately run both ways.