- Thu Oct 11, 2012 11:35 am
#6087
I hope you don't mind if I jump in here - I skimmed through most of the previous dialogue.
In your last question, you mention causal indicators. The fact of the matter is that you do NOT need a causal indicator for there to be causal reasoning. The same goes for conditional reasoning - indicators are NOT necessary. The point of an indicator is that it being there makes it more apparent that the reasoning is there.
If I say, "riding roller coasters cause people's heartbeat to rise - therefore riding the roller coaster caused this person's heartbeat to rise," it's clearly causal reasoning (because the premise says so), and the causal indicator there, "caused," makes this very obvious. But let's say I say, "riding roller coasters cause people's heartbeat to rise - hence, after riding the roller coaster the person's heartbeat rose." Can I no longer say that there's causal reasoning in this case? That's where the trickiness comes in. It's a little less explicit about the fact that the roller coaster caused it in this case. Since there's nothing there explicitly stating that the roller coaster caused the person's heartbeat to rise, I can't say for sure that it was a cause and effect case - maybe it was just a coincidence. But implicitly, it would seem like it was a cause and effect case.
If I asked you to weaken either case, how would you do so? If I asked you to strengthen each case, how would you do so? I know that I would probably weaken or strengthen each case in the same way. To weaken it, I would try to blame something else for the increased heartbeat or I would say that someone else went on the roller coaster and didn't have an increase in heartbeat. To strengthen it, I would show another case where someone else had an increased heartbeat after riding the roller coaster or rule out another cause. But you see that those would work in either case.
What's a required assumption in this case? You could have defender assumption that would say that X didn't cause the increased heart rate. Or you could have a supporter assumption that says that the roller coaster caused the heartbeat to rise. The second one would be asked in the case where it didn't mention explicitly (in the premise) that the roller coaster caused the increased heart rate. Keep in mind that if the conclusion tells you it's causal reasoning, you could weaken that case much easier than if the premise says it.
I'm going to stop my rant now, and let you read that over. Though, if you have any follow up questions or questions about this post, feel free to ask more!
-Moshe
In your last question, you mention causal indicators. The fact of the matter is that you do NOT need a causal indicator for there to be causal reasoning. The same goes for conditional reasoning - indicators are NOT necessary. The point of an indicator is that it being there makes it more apparent that the reasoning is there.
If I say, "riding roller coasters cause people's heartbeat to rise - therefore riding the roller coaster caused this person's heartbeat to rise," it's clearly causal reasoning (because the premise says so), and the causal indicator there, "caused," makes this very obvious. But let's say I say, "riding roller coasters cause people's heartbeat to rise - hence, after riding the roller coaster the person's heartbeat rose." Can I no longer say that there's causal reasoning in this case? That's where the trickiness comes in. It's a little less explicit about the fact that the roller coaster caused it in this case. Since there's nothing there explicitly stating that the roller coaster caused the person's heartbeat to rise, I can't say for sure that it was a cause and effect case - maybe it was just a coincidence. But implicitly, it would seem like it was a cause and effect case.
If I asked you to weaken either case, how would you do so? If I asked you to strengthen each case, how would you do so? I know that I would probably weaken or strengthen each case in the same way. To weaken it, I would try to blame something else for the increased heartbeat or I would say that someone else went on the roller coaster and didn't have an increase in heartbeat. To strengthen it, I would show another case where someone else had an increased heartbeat after riding the roller coaster or rule out another cause. But you see that those would work in either case.
What's a required assumption in this case? You could have defender assumption that would say that X didn't cause the increased heart rate. Or you could have a supporter assumption that says that the roller coaster caused the heartbeat to rise. The second one would be asked in the case where it didn't mention explicitly (in the premise) that the roller coaster caused the increased heart rate. Keep in mind that if the conclusion tells you it's causal reasoning, you could weaken that case much easier than if the premise says it.
I'm going to stop my rant now, and let you read that over. Though, if you have any follow up questions or questions about this post, feel free to ask more!
-Moshe