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    A real cause cannot produce effects in a time and place i... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→So-called second causes are not real causes because real causes cannot be spatially or temporally distinct from their effects.

    A real cause cannot produce effects in a time and place in which the cause itself is not present.

    Causation
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    Second causes are spatially or temporally distinct from their effects.So-called second causes are not real causes because real causes cannot be spatia...

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    SEP: edwards
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    Edwards implicitly distinguishes between a real or true cause and a cause in the ordinary or “vulgar” sense. The latter is “that, after or upon the existence of which, or the existence of it after such a manner, the existence of another thing follows” (“The Mind,” no. 26; Edwards 1957–, vol. 6, 350). Vulgar causes aren't real causes, however. In the first place, so-called second causes are spatially or temporally distinct from their effects, and “no [real] cause can produce effects in a time and

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