Roman Ingarden’s Theory of Causation Revised

Polish Journal of Philosophy 4 (2):182--196 (2010)
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Abstract

This article presents Roman Ingarden’s theory of causation, as developed in volume III of The Controversy about the Existence of the World, and defends analternative which uses some important insights of Ingarden. It rejects Ingarden’s claim that a cause is simultaneous with its effect and that a cause necessitates its effect. It uses Ingarden’s notion of ‘inclinations’ and accepts Ingarden’s claim that an event cannot necessitate a later event

Author's Profile

Daniel von Wachter
International Academy of Philosophy In The Principality of Liechtenstein

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