- published: 28 Apr 2016
- views: 23009
Causality (also referred to as causation) is the relationship between an event (the cause) and a second event (the effect), where the second event is understood as a consequence of the first.
In common usage, causality is also the relationship between a set of factors (causes) and a phenomenon (the effect). Anything that affects an effect is a factor of that effect. A direct factor is a factor that affects an effect directly, that is, without any intervening factors. (Intervening factors are sometimes called "intermediate factors".) The connection between a cause(s) and an effect in this way can also be referred to as a causal nexus.
Though the causes and effects are typically related to changes or events, candidates include objects, processes, properties, variables, facts, and states of affairs; characterizing the causal relationship can be the subject of much debate.
The philosophical treatment of causality extends over millennia. In the Western philosophical tradition, discussion stretches back at least to Aristotle, and the topic remains a staple in contemporary philosophy.
i can't believe all the things you do
it's hard to believe that someone like you
can call yourself human
like a show on broadway
you follow the spotlight
that's everywhere but on you
'cause the things you do
cause so much pain and fuck,
the things you say are so goddamn vain
so many times
we could get along
but now it seems as though
something is wrong
and maybe it is you
or maybe it is me
through all the pain
i've learn something i can't explain
i can't explain
something humane
to someone so vain