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| | C | | There are 7 entries in the glossary. | | Pages: 1 |
| causality (principle of) | The principle that identifies the nature of the relationship between a cause and its effect. I frequently use this formulation. The nature of the existent that acts, moves, changes or endures, causes the nature of that existent's action, motion, change or endurance to be what it is.1 For related elaboration, please see PRINCIPLE
(FUNDAMENTAL, PHILOSOPHICAL). Elaboration As do my fundamental, philosophical principles of reality,
identity and non-contradiction,
in my terms, the principle of causality provides a different vantage point on the fact that what is, is.
To clarify how, for me, the principle of causality restates those of reality, identity and non-contradiction, it's satisfied me to restate the principle of causality this way: The nature of an existent causes the nature of that existent's being to be what it is. In my terms, what is, is (reality); what a thing is, is what it is (identity); in a specific respect and at a specific instant, a thing is what it is, and is not what it's not (non-contradiction);
and what a thing
is causes it to be what it is (causality). (For me, action, motion, change and endurance are particular types of being, so "what a thing is causes it to be what it is" captures the same, basic meaning as does "the nature of the existent that acts, moves, changes or endures, causes the nature of that existent's action, motion, change or endurance to be what it is.") By my standards, each such principle implies each of the others and each provides a different focus
on the same reality.
Also in my terms, now emphasizing the different focus provided by each principle, just as the principle of identity focuses on a thing's limits, so the principle of causality focuses on its freedoms.
By my epistemological standards, the concept "causality" ultimately can be defined only ostensively. See DEFINITION
(OSTENSIVE).
Notes 1I drew inspiration from Ayn Rand's discussion of causality in her novel, Atlas
Shrugged when I first formulated my own principle of causality. With additional reflection, I have evolved my formulation beyond such origins.
| | | | | causality as reciprocal | The principle that just as one existent A can cause an effect in another existent B, so the impacted existent B can cause an effect in existent A.1 See CAUSALITY (LAW OF).
ElaborationFor example, two people who lean against one another in mutual support embody reciprocal
causation. While paying attention to their wider context, a person can appreciate that even more "linear," A to B types of causation also ultimately involve reciprocal attributes. For example, a bird can eat a whole worm because the worm is the specific type of entity that it is. If the worm were a whole mountain instead, the bird would not be able to eat it. The worm's nature is relevant to causing the bird to embody the capacity
to eat
it. The bird and the worm causally effect one another and embody reciprocal causation.
Note
1This definition, while strictly mine, in my opinion benefits from the reconstruction of Ayn Rand's ontological philosophy - and from his discussion of reciprocal causation - that Chris Matthew Sciabarra provided in his book, Ayn
Rand: The Russian Radical.
| | | | | CCUU | Countryside Church Unitarian Universalist.
See LIBERAL
RELIGION, UNITARIAN
UNIVERSALISM | | | | | Cherita | My life partner and wife. We've remained happily married since we partied at our wedding ceremony in what was then literally the year 1999. Cherita gave birth to our daughter, ALIANA, in the year 2002. Please see also THE WOMAN WITH WHOM I PARTNER IN LIFE in the About
Me area of this website.
| | | | | church | On this site,
unless otherwise stated, the word "church" typically refers to Countryside
Church Unitarian Universalist
in Palatine, Illinois.
See COUNTRYSIDE
CHURCH UU, LIBERAL
RELIGION, UNITARIAN
UNIVERSALISM. | | | | | compassion | In consciousness and in action, empathic sensitivity to human beings' needs - including both one's own and others' needs.1
Note
1Although this is strictly my own definition, I'm grateful for what I've learned from the work of Marshall Rosenberg - including from his book, Nonviolent Communication: A Language of Life - and the degree
to which it has informed and influenced my formulation of this definition.
I can't imagine having formulated this definition in this manner without Marshall Rosenberg's influence.
Prior to having discovered the work of Marshall Rosenberg, I also benefited from consulting the following reference.
"compassion," Answers.com, Reference,
Words, WordNet (A semantic lexicon of word connections and related words.) http://www.answers.com/topic/compassion [June 24, 2005]
| | | | | Countryside Church UU | A religiously liberal, non-creedal, Unitarian Universalist church located in
Palatine, Illinois.
See CCUU,
LIBERAL
RELIGION, UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISM
ElaborationMy life partner/wife, Cherita, and I joined as Members of the Countryside
Church Unitarian Universalist congregation in May 2005. Our daughter, Aliana, attends Religious Education classes and
some services (some for children, some for adults) there.
My father, Len, was for years a
Member, and today remains an actively participating Friend, of this church. My mother, Barbara, also had been a Member and then a Friend of the church, until she
died in the year 2002. The Memorial Service that commemorated and celebrated her
life, and at which I delivered a eulogy, was also held at this
church.
The wedding of Cherita and me, which was held at the Horace Williams
House in Chapel Hill, North Carolina in
1999, was officiated by Rev. Charles Kast. He is a Unitarian
Universalist minister who serves a UU
congregation in Chapel Hill, North
Carolina.
Prior to moving, early in the year 2005, to the suburbs
northwest of Chicago, Illinois, Cherita
and I did sometimes attend services at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Raleigh, North
Carolina.
During childhood, I regularly attended Religious
Education classes and some services with my parents in the CCUU congregation.
During high school, I even engaged in a debate with the
man who was then CCUU's settled minister, Rev. Ruppert L. Lovely, on the subject: "Is Science Based on an
Article of Faith?" This debate was held in the church sanctuary immediately following
that Sunday's worship service. I argued that science is not based on an
article of faith. Rev. Lovely argued that it is.
Countryside Church Unitarian Universalist
(CCUU) participates in the Unitarian
Universalist Association (UUA).
For more
information about CCUU, please visit the Countryside Church Unitarian
Universalist (CCUU) web site.
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