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Mario Bunge on Causality: Some Key Insights and...
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Mario Bunge on Causality: Some Key Insights and Their Leibnizian Precedents

Abstract

Mario Bunge wrote his classic Causality and Modern Science more than 60 years ago, and a third revised edition was published by Dover in 1979. With its impressive scope and historical perspective it was a long way ahead of its time. But many of its insights still have not been sufficiently appreciated by physicists and philosophers alike. These include Bunge’s distinction between causation and other types of determination, his critique of the still-dominant Humean accounts of causality as leaving out the productive aspect of determination, his critique of the conflation of determination with predictability, his insistence on the fictional character of isolated causal chains, and his demonstration that “causal connectability” depends only on the principle of retarded action, not causation. It will be argued that there is a (perhaps surprising) degree of agreement between his views on determinism and causality and those of Leibniz, and a comparison between the two thinkers’ views is used to throw further light on these matters.

Authors

Arthur RTW

Book title

Mario Bunge: A Centenary Festschrift

Pagination

pp. 185-204

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 2019

DOI

10.1007/978-3-030-16673-1_11
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