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Single Idea 14562
[filed under theme 7. Existence / B. Change in Existence / 2. Processes
]
Full Idea
A process has a unity to it that comes from being the expression of a collection of causal powers.
Gist of Idea
A process is unified as an expression of a collection of causal powers
Source
S.Mumford/R.Lill Anjum (Getting Causes from Powers [2011], 5.5 1)
Book Ref
Anjum,R.J./Mumford,S.: 'Getting Causes from Powers' [OUP 2011], p.117
A Reaction
I would be happier with this if I had a clear notion of what counts as a 'collection' of causal powers. We are back with the Leibnizian anguish over what constitutes a 'unity'. Processes need more attention, I'm thinking.
Related Idea
Idea 14559
Does causation need a third tying ingredient, or just two that meet, or might there be a single process? [Mumford/Anjum]
The
21 ideas
with the same theme
[accepting purposeful sequences of happenings as existents]:
13213
|
All comings-to-be are passings-away, and vice versa
[Aristotle]
|
15768
|
An actuality is usually thought to be a process
[Aristotle]
|
15389
|
In Whitehead 'processes' consist of events beginning and ending
[Whitehead, by Simons]
|
11092
|
A river is a process, with stages; if we consider it as one thing, we are considering a process
[Quine]
|
12683
|
Objects and substances are a subcategory of the natural kinds of processes
[Ellis]
|
22626
|
Process philosophy insists that processes are not inferior in being to substances
[Rescher]
|
16554
|
Activities have place, rate, duration, entities, properties, modes, direction, polarity, energy and range
[Machamer/Darden/Craver]
|
14760
|
Four-dimensionalism sees things and processes as belonging in the same category
[Sider]
|
8979
|
Slow and continuous events (like balding or tree-growth) are called 'processes', not 'events'
[Simons]
|
8981
|
Maybe processes behave like stuff-nouns, and events like count-nouns
[Simons]
|
12836
|
Fans of process ontology cheat, since river-stages refer to 'rivers'
[Simons]
|
12841
|
I don't believe in processes
[Simons]
|
14947
|
Any process can be described as transfer of measurable information
[Ladyman/Ross]
|
23784
|
Processes don't begin or end; they just change direction unexpectedly
[Williams,NE]
|
23790
|
Processes are either strings of short unchanging states, or continuous and unreducible events
[Williams,NE]
|
14562
|
A process is unified as an expression of a collection of causal powers
[Mumford/Anjum]
|
19480
|
Process philosophy places the dynamic nature of being at the centre of our theories
[Seibt]
|
19479
|
Reductionists identify processes by their 'owner', but tornadoes etc. are processes without owners
[Seibt]
|
19481
|
Traditionally small things add up to processes, but quantum mechanics reverses this
[Seibt]
|
20468
|
Quantum mechanics deals with processes, rather than with things
[Rovelli]
|
22629
|
Basic processes are said to be either physical, or organic, or psychological
[Ingthorsson]
|