Location







The seminar is held online by Zoom. Zoom Meeting link:

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/889933315?pwd=Q3U3V3VQdXpXckhJYWRrcWRiMUhhQT09




10 December (Friday) 4:15 PM  ONLINE
Gergely Kertész
Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest

Causation, Physical Closure and the Causal Exclusion Argument
Recent debates concerning the so-called Causal Exclusion Argument (CEA) highlighted the importance of the chosen interpretation of causation with respect to the validity of the argument. Many philosophers raised concerns about the notion of a sufficient cause employed in the formulation of the Causal Closure of the Physical (CCP) premise in the original CEA and urged for an approach more consistent with the literature on causation, but the results of these investigations also proved to be problem-ridden. It seems that in case the relevant premises of CEA are interpreted on grounds of the same theory of causation we end up with some uneasy tension. If causation is the transference of conserved physical quantities the argument becomes an empty truism. If causation is difference-making, the picture is less clear, but we might end up with the rejection of CCP, as only the higher-level causes are proper difference-makers for the higher-level effects we are interested in.
This talk aims to show that the problems encountered in discussions of CEA might be circumvented by the utilization of a new theory of causation that constructs causal notions from non-causal concepts utilized by most fundamental physical theories. This theory allows for the reformulation of CCP as Physical Closure and it has the potential to create a new kind of conceptual space for the seamless accommodation of higher-level causal talk into a physicalist outlook.