Causality
Submitted by admin on August 13, 2009 - 21:10
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Causality
There are various types of causality that are important to understand. If something is an effect, it requires a cause. Since God is not an effect, the Supreme Being does not require a cause. Thus, the question, What is the cause of God? is a meaningless question, since only an effect requires a cause. As Aristotle said, God is the Uncaused Cause. The four major causes are material, formal, efficient, and final causes. A more complete list of causes may be summarized as follows:
- Material cause is that from which a thing comes to be. For example, the material cause of a bronze statute is bronze. The material cause of a house is typically wood, nails, drywall, etc.
- Formal cause is that by which a thing is what it is. For example, a bronze statute may be a statute of a horse, flower, historic person, or event. The formal cause of a house is its specifying features. Its number of rooms, style, size, color, and other defining features.
- Efficient cause is that by which a thing comes to be. The efficient cause of a bronze statute is the artisan. The carpenter is the efficient cause of the house.
- Final cause is that for which a thing comes to be or the end purpose of a thing. A home's final cause is to provide shelter, comfort, warmth, and convenience location for daily living. The final cause of a statute is beauty, remembrance, symbolism. The purpose of the Statute of Liberty in New York is to symbolize the importance of liberty.
- Instrumental cause is that by means of which an efficient cause brings about its effect. The sculptor's tools are instruments that an artisan uses to shape a block of marble into a marble statute. The hammer, screw driver, drill, and saw are instrumentals that a carpenter uses to build a house.
- Exemplar cause is that after which a thing comes to be. The building plans of a house are an exemplar cause of the house. The artist's mental conception of a marble statute is the exemplar cause of the actual marble stature.
- Proximate cause is the immediately prior cause in a series of causes.
- Remote cause is a distant prior cause in a series of causes.
- Intrinsic cause is a cause that causes a similar effect to itself. For example, fire (hot) causes wax and clay, likewise, to become hot. The hotness of a fire causes the hotness in wax and clay when they become hot too.
- Extrinsic cause is a cause that causes an effect that is dissimilar to itself. When fire causes hard wax and soft clay to become hot, it also causes extrinsically the hard wax to become a liquid and the soft clay to become hard adobe.
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