561 | Is there cause outside matter, and can it be separated, and is it one or many? [Aristotle] |
1894 | Some say that causes are physical, some say not [Sext.Empiricus] |
7563 | The old 'influx' view of causation says it is a flow of accidental properties from A to B [Suárez, by Jolley] |
12497 | Causes are the substances which have the powers to produce action [Locke] |
8412 | A causal interaction is when two processes intersect, and correlated modifications persist afterwards [Salmon] |
18380 | Negative causations supervene on positive causations plus their laws? [Armstrong] |
8326 | Science has shown that causal relations are just transfers of energy or momentum [Fair, by Sosa/Tooley] |
10379 | Fair shifted his view to talk of counterfactuals about energy flow [Fair, by Schaffer,J] |
8416 | Reductionists can't explain accidents, uninstantiated laws, probabilities, or the existence of any laws [Tooley] |
8328 | Causation isn't energy transfer, because an electron is caused by previous temporal parts [Sosa/Tooley] |
8327 | If direction of causation is just direction of energy transfer, that seems to involve causation [Sosa/Tooley] |
2542 | Causation in the material world is energy-transfer, of motion, electricity or gravity [McGinn] |
11937 | We should analyse causation in terms of powers, not vice versa [Molnar] |
8387 | A cause has its effects in virtue of its properties [Crane] |
14586 | Physical causation consists in transference of conserved quantities [Dowe, by Mumford/Anjum] |
4787 | Causation interaction is an exchange of conserved quantities, such as mass, energy or charge [Dowe, by Psillos] |
9493 | We should explain causation by powers, not powers by causation [Bird] |
10366 | Causation transcends nature, because absences can cause things [Schaffer,J] |
10377 | Causation may not be a process, if a crucial part of the process is 'disconnected' [Schaffer,J] |
10378 | A causal process needs to be connected to the effect in the right way [Schaffer,J] |
10382 | Causation can't be a process, because a process needs causation as a primitive [Schaffer,J] |
17494 | Since causal events are related by mechanisms, causation can be analysed in that way [Glennan] |
14563 | Causation is the passing around of powers [Mumford/Anjum] |
23013 | The main process theory of causation says it is transference of mass, energy, momentum or charge [Baron/Miller] |
23014 | If causes are processes, what is causation by omission? (Distinguish legal from scientific causes?) [Baron/Miller] |
22608 | Casuation is the transmission of conserved quantities between causal processes [Ingthorsson] |
22614 | Interventionist causal theory says it gets a reliable result whenever you manipulate it [Ingthorsson] |
22621 | Causation as transfer only works for asymmetric interactions [Ingthorsson] |