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4542 | Science has taken the meaning out of causation; cause and effect are two equal sides of an equation [Nietzsche] |
Full Idea: Science has emptied the concept of causality of its content and retained it as a formula of an equation, in which it has become at bottom a matter of indifference on which side cause is placed and on which side effect. | |
From: Friedrich Nietzsche (The Will to Power (notebooks) [1888], §551) | |
A reaction: What a perceptive remark in the nineteenth century. Science is notoriously uninterested in the direction of time, and such a symmetry seems to make the concept of causation redundant. |
4553 | We derive the popular belief in cause and effect from our belief that our free will causes things [Nietzsche] |
Full Idea: The popular belief in cause and effect is founded on the presupposition that free will is the cause of every effect: it is only from this that we derive the feeling of causality. | |
From: Friedrich Nietzsche (The Will to Power (notebooks) [1888], §667) | |
A reaction: It may be that our first experiences of causation involve the wil, though I don't see why babies shouldn't also observe. Nietzsche is muddling the epistemology with the ontology. |