- Fri Dec 22, 2023 12:46 pm
#104493
Hi,
1. On the Chapter Eight Advanced Causal Reasoning PDF it is said that more advanced arguments often remove the central assumption of causality. I am wondering what exactly the assumption they're referring to is.
2. On the same PDF, under the discussion of increases and decreases in likelihood and degree, after the increases degree example it is said that the removal of the cause doesn't eliminate the effect, it just removed the increase or decrease in the effect. I am confused on what this means, below is the example given:
"Diet is extremely important to health and junk food has a negative impact on your health. Thus, the more junk food you eat, the worse your overall health will be as a result."
1. On the Chapter Eight Advanced Causal Reasoning PDF it is said that more advanced arguments often remove the central assumption of causality. I am wondering what exactly the assumption they're referring to is.
2. On the same PDF, under the discussion of increases and decreases in likelihood and degree, after the increases degree example it is said that the removal of the cause doesn't eliminate the effect, it just removed the increase or decrease in the effect. I am confused on what this means, below is the example given:
"Diet is extremely important to health and junk food has a negative impact on your health. Thus, the more junk food you eat, the worse your overall health will be as a result."