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    Hume identifies causation with constant conjunction and l... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The Humean account of causation faces the hard problem of distinguishing genuine laws from mere regularities that are not laws.

    Hume identifies causation with constant conjunction and laws with constant conjunction.

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    Constant conjunction is neither necessary nor sufficient for the presence of a g...The Humean account of causation faces the hard problem of distinguishing genuine...Without a principled distinction between genuine laws and non-law regularities, ...

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    Humean assumptions hold that causation is nothing but constant conjunc...87%If constant conjunction were necessary for a genuine law, then whereve...84%Hume's definition of causation as constant conjunction is too broad, b...81%The covering-law model appeared to provide a basis for asserting histo...80%

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    The problem is made clearer by Reid's second objection to Hume's analysis of causation and constant conjunction. He writes, “It follows from [Hume's] definition of a cause, that night is the cause of day, and day the cause of night. For no two things have more constantly followed each other since the beginning of the world” (EAP 4.9, 249). Since we don't ordinarily think that day is the cause of night, or vice versa, Hume must deny that the two are actually constantly conjoined, or, rather, he m

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