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7139 | Explanation is just showing the succession of things ever more clearly [Nietzsche] |
Full Idea: Showing the succession of things ever more clearly is what's named 'explanation': no more than that! | |
From: Friedrich Nietzsche (Writings from Late Notebooks [1887], 35[52]) | |
A reaction: If you lay bare all causal sequences, you may not have explained anything until you have pointed out a pattern in the events. Explanations must partly depend on the interests of the enquirer, so pure catalogues of events won't do. |
7082 | Nature requires causal explanations, but society requires clarification by reasons and motives [Weber, by Critchley] |
Full Idea: Weber coined the distinction between explanation and clarification, saying that natural phenomena require causal explanation, while social phenomena require clarification by giving reasons or offering possible motives for how things are. | |
From: report of Max Weber (works [1905]) by Simon Critchley - Continental Philosophy - V. Short Intro Ch.7 | |
A reaction: This is music to the ears of property dualists and other non-reductivists, but if you go midway in the hierarchy of animals (a mouse, say) the distinction blurs. Weber probably hadn't digested Darwin, whose big impact came around 1905. |