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    We see the first billiard ball hit the second and the sec... — Carmelics
    Home/Perception
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    Supports→Causation must be something different from what we ordinarily take it to be

    We see the first billiard ball hit the second and the second move, but we do not see the movement of the first necessitate the movement of the second

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    PerceptionCausation

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    Modality & Possibility1 linkedSkepticism

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    Causation must be something different from what we ordinarily take it to beOur ordinary notion of causation involves causes necessitating their effectsThe concept of causation must be derived from sensory experience (impressions)We lack sensory awareness of this necessitation between cause and effect

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    When observing a billiard-ball moving toward another, the mind is carr...75%Something other than the First serves as the proximate first cause of ...71%The First is not a mover but rather the cause of the existence of the ...71%The 'billiard ball' picture holds that all causation is by impact.71%

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    SEP: reid
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    Reid develops his account of causation in light of Hume's account. As Reid sees it, Hume starts with the assumption that if we are to learn what causation is, we must first determine from what aspect of our sensory experience the concept of causation is derived. Hume would put the point in terms of the Way of Ideas as follows: we must determine from what impression our idea of causation is copied. However, Hume believed he had discovered that there is nothing in our sensory experience correspond

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