The thesis aims at analyzing metaphysical implications of the ordinary concept of "cause". The approach is justified through a discussion of Hume's theory of causation, accompanied by discussions about the nature of definition itself. ;Four major metaphysical problems of causation are discussed: The ontological status of cause ; the temporal relation between causes and effects ; the direction of causation ; and causal necessity . ;Through analytical discussions of the existing literatures on tho…
Read moreThe thesis aims at analyzing metaphysical implications of the ordinary concept of "cause". The approach is justified through a discussion of Hume's theory of causation, accompanied by discussions about the nature of definition itself. ;Four major metaphysical problems of causation are discussed: The ontological status of cause ; the temporal relation between causes and effects ; the direction of causation ; and causal necessity . ;Through analytical discussions of the existing literatures on those problems, the thesis identifies certain metaphysical assumptions to be responsible for the profound difficulties that the authors encounter, including the assumptions of a sort of Cartesian dualism of beings and activities, Leibniz' law of identity, and the Newtonian mechanical model of causation. A "particle-wave" ontology is introduced as an alternative to these assumptions, and thus provides solutions to the difficulties which otherwise cannot be solved. The dialectical nature of the ontology may not be happily accepted by philosophers of strict analytical tradition, but it finds its predecessors in the Chinese Taoist philosophy, Hegelian philosophy, Whiteheadian philosophy, and the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum physics. The author hopes to convince the readers that there is a paradox in the metaphysics of causation analogous to the paradox in the arithmetics revealed by Godel's theorem: We cannot have a complete metaphysics of causation without inconsistency