Causal Determinism

Put simply, causal determinism expresses the belief that every effect has a cause, and therefore science, pursued diligently enough, will explain all natural phenomena and thus produce a TOE (Theory of Everything). This idea goes hand in hand with materialism. Scientists and skeptics may implicitly favour causal determinism because it does not allow for any supernatural explanations of reality. As Pierre-Simon Laplace noted around 1814, such a theory would also (in theory) grant a sufficiently powerful being the ability to determine any future state of the universe, thus making the future as readily accessible as the past (at least from that powerful being's frame of reference). See also: Determinism

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
alan bates
the fixer
ron moody
emigration
true grit
melvyn douglas
i never sang for my father
the great white hope
gulbuddin hekmatyar
jacopo peri
ryan o'neal
predicative verb
sunday bloody sunday
glottal consonant
kotch
extinct australian animals
merrily we roll along
jean vigo
zro de conduite
animator
lamed vav tzadikim
cognitive science of mathematics
scene graph
the protectorate
alan greenspan
list of cognitive science topics
reflector
floyd patterson
william hazlitt
marger sealey
minamoto no yoritomo
new year's day
richard krajicek
accountability
a shock to the system
responsibility
judgment
last judgement
marciana marina
list of zoroastrians
quorum sensing
neuruppin
epimetheus (mythology)
epimetheus (moon)