Causal closure
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Physical causal closure is a
metaphysical Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that studies the fundamental nature of reality, the first principles of being, identity and change, space and time, causality, necessity, and possibility. It includes questions about the nature of conscio ...
fallacy about the nature of causation in the physical realm with significant ramifications in the study of
metaphysics Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that studies the fundamental nature of reality, the first principles of being, identity and change, space and time, causality, necessity, and possibility. It includes questions about the nature of conscio ...
and the mind. It's based on the misconception that the physical world is a
combinatorial Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and an end in obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many ap ...
algorithm In mathematics and computer science, an algorithm () is a finite sequence of rigorous instructions, typically used to solve a class of specific problems or to perform a computation. Algorithms are used as specifications for performing ...
and not an entropic one.https://www.quantamagazine.org/why-this-universe-new-calculation-suggests-our-cosmos-is-typical-20221117/ Why This Universe? A New Calculation Suggests Our Cosmos Is Typical. - Quanta Magazine In a strongly stated version, physical causal closure says that "all physical states have ''pure'' physical causes" —
Jaegwon Kim Jaegwon Kim (September 12, 1934 – November 27, 2019) was a Korean-American philosopher. At the time of his death, Kim was an emeritus professor of philosophy at Brown University. He also taught at several other leading American universities d ...
, or that "physical effects have ''only'' physical causes" — Agustin Vincente, p. 150. Those who accept the theory tend, in general although not exclusively, to the physicalist view that all entities that exist are physical entities. As Karl Popper says, "The physicalist principle of closedness of the physical ... is of decisive importance and I take it as the characteristic principle of physicalism or materialism."


Definition

Physical causal closure has stronger and weaker formulations. The stronger formulations assert that no physical event has a cause outside the physical domain — Jaegwon Kim. That is, they assert that for physical events, causes ''other'' than physical causes do not exist. (Physical events that are not causally ''determined'' may be said to have their objective ''chances of occurrence'' determined by physical causes.) Weaker forms of the theory state that "Every physical event has a physical cause." — Barbara Montero, or that "Every physical effect (that is, caused event) has physical sufficient causes" — Agustin Vincente, (According to Vincente, a number of caveats have to be observed, among which is the postulate that "physical entities" are entities postulated by a true theory of physics, a theory of which we are ignorant today, and that such a true theory "will not include mental (or in general, dubious) concepts" (Note 5, p. 168).) or that "if we trace the causal ancestry of a physical event we need never go outside the physical domain." — Jaegwon Kim. Weaker forms of physical causal closure are synonymous with the ''causal completeness'', the notion that "Every physical effect that has a sufficient cause has a sufficient physical cause." That is, weaker forms allow that ''in addition'' to physical causes, there may be other kinds of causes for physical events. The notion of reductionism supplements physical causal closure with the claim that ''all'' events ultimately can be reduced to physical events. Under these circumstances, mental events are a subset of physical events and caused by them.


Importance

Physical causal closure is especially important when considering dualist theories of mind. If no physical event has a cause outside the physical realm, it would follow that non-physical mental events would be causally impotent in the physical world. However, as Kim has agreed, it seems intuitively problematic to strip mental events of their causal power. Only epiphenomenalists would agree that mental events do not have causal power, but
epiphenomenalism Epiphenomenalism is a position on the mind–body problem which holds that physical and biochemical events within the human body ( sense organs, neural impulses, and muscle contractions, for example) are the sole cause of mental events (thought, ...
is objectionable to many philosophers. One way of maintaining the causal powers of mental events is to assert token identity
non-reductive physicalism In philosophy, physicalism is the metaphysical thesis that "everything is physics, physical", that there is "nothing over and above" the physical, or that everything supervenience, supervenes on the physical. Physicalism is a form of ontological mo ...
—that mental properties
supervene In philosophy, supervenience refers to a relation between sets of properties or sets of facts. X is said to supervene on Y if and only if some difference in Y is necessary for any difference in X to be possible. Some examples include: * Whether t ...
on neurological properties. That is, there can be no change in the mental without a corresponding change in the physical. Yet this implies that mental events can have two causes (physical and mental), a situation which apparently results in
overdetermination Overdetermination occurs when a single-observed effect is determined by multiple causes, any one of which alone would be sufficient to account for ("determine") the effect. That is, there are more causes present than are necessary to cause the e ...
(redundant causes), and denies the strong physical causal closure. Kim argues that if the strong physical causal closure argument is correct, the only way to maintain mental causation is to assert type identity reductive physicalism—that mental properties are neurological properties.


Criticism

The validity of the physical causal closure has long been debated. In modern times, it has been pointed out that science is based on removing the subject from investigations, and by seeking objectivity. This outsider status for the observer, a third-person perspective, is said by some philosophers to have automatically severed science from the ability to examine subjective issues like consciousness and free will. A different attack upon the physical causal closure discussed by Hodgson is to claim science itself does not support the physical causal closure. Some philosophers have criticized the argument for the physical causal closure by supporting
teleology Teleology (from and )Partridge, Eric. 1977''Origins: A Short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English'' London: Routledge, p. 4187. or finalityDubray, Charles. 2020 912Teleology" In ''The Catholic Encyclopedia'' 14. New York: Robert Appleton ...
and mental-to-physical causation via a ''soul''.


Ignoring phenomena

There seem ''prima facie'' to be irreducible purpose-based (or teleological) explanations of some natural phenomena. For instance, the movement of a writer's fingers on the keyboard and a reader's eyes across the screen is irreducibly explained in reference to the ''goal'' of writing an intelligible sentence or of learning about the physical causal closure arguments, respectively. On the face of it, an exclusively non-teleological (descriptive) account of the neurological and biological features of hand movement and eye movement misses the point. To say, "I am moving my fingers ''because'' my brain signals are triggering muscle motion in my arms" is true, but does not exhaustively explain all the causes. In Aristotelian terms, a neurological account explains the
efficient cause The four causes or four explanations are, in Aristotelianism, Aristotelian thought, four fundamental types of answer to the question "why?", in Posterior Analytics, analysis of change or movement in nature: the Four_causes#Material, material, the ...
, while the purpose-based account explains the
final cause The four causes or four explanations are, in Aristotelian thought, four fundamental types of answer to the question "why?", in analysis of change or movement in nature: the material, the formal, the efficient, and the final. Aristotle wrote th ...
. The physical causal closure thesis challenges this account. It attempts to reduce all teleological final (and formal) causes to efficient causes. Goetz and Taliaferro urge that this challenge is unjustified, partly because it would imply that the ''real'' cause of arguing for the physical causal closure is neurobiological activity in the brain, not (as we know it is) the purpose-based attempt to understand the world and explain it to others.


Views of David Deutsch

Causal closure cannot be resolved if we give up at some point. For each causal explanation, new questions emerge. According to David Deutsch causal closure is impossible to be resolved in every day life (it is fallacy when it's used to assert a non-Everettian single first cause or when it's used to hide hypernymic ontological questions ike constructorsbeyond specific events ike constructor results. Still everything is physical, but there is no closure. The correct term is "Everettian causal connectome", "manyworlded causal connectome" and "Everettian hypernymization" (many-worlds interpretation plus many-axioms interpretation; not only different universes with the same physics but also different physical foundations; but still many families of universes exist ot onebecause some axiomatics are mutually exclusive). Many-worlds interpretation is about alternative events, but a deeper approach on Hugh Everett's view is the many-constructors interpretation (any universe-making constructor necessarily exists; is self-caused being mathematically correct). God is an exo-cause of the universe (not a self-cause); but still God is a self-cause of the system God—universe; thus any cosmogonic theory requires self-causation (or self-causality). God is necessarily a person; if God were a physicalist procedure then we simply distort language by merging semantics. God is a personhooded thinker, thus he requires a personhood-yielding computer (aka brain; but immaterial and not necessarily similar to ours). The idealized brain can be described topologically as a connectome with nodes (infinite brain models are possible; like a cloud of different densities and different permitted directions of informational flow). Topology doesn't have to do with specific distances (but relationships; with many of them you may get interpreted distances by observers made of the same topological stuff), but specific topological connectomes create distance-like rules (for example topology is used in the foundations of quantum mechanics; theoretically it has nothing to do with specific distances, but procedural restrictions create relative distances amongst objects created by the same rules). Thus even an idealized immaterial brain, would topologically require volume in order it doesn't merge its nodes; and thinking requires time (thinking is procedural; otherwise it would be static structure; but static structure isn't universe-like; it doesn't meet the criteria of spacetime, and it cannot be procedurally perceived if in that reality everything is static). Thus spacetime is more fundamental than brains; and God is impossible being not the utmost fundamental. God cannot resolve the causal closure by failing to being the utmost fundamental existence; thus by failing to exist (thinking requires a connectome, and God requires causal closure to be possible at the fundamental level, without Everettian alternatives).


See also

*
Antireductionism Antireductionism is the position in science and metaphysics that stands in contrast to reductionism (anti-holism) by advocating that not all properties of a system can be explained in terms of its constituent parts and their interactions. General ...
*
Epiphenomenalism Epiphenomenalism is a position on the mind–body problem which holds that physical and biochemical events within the human body ( sense organs, neural impulses, and muscle contractions, for example) are the sole cause of mental events (thought, ...
*
Physical determinism Determinism is a philosophical view, where all events are determined completely by previously existing causes. Deterministic theories throughout the history of philosophy have developed from diverse and sometimes overlapping motives and consi ...
* Reductionism


References

{{reflist, refs= {{cite encyclopedia, last=Falcon, first=Andrea, title=Aristotle on Causality, url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/aristotle-causality/, encyclopedia=Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, publisher=Stanford, access-date=2014-03-10 {{cite book, author1=Stewart Goetz , author2=Charles Taliaferro , title=Naturalism (Intervensions) , year=2008, publisher=Eerdmans, isbn=978-0802807687, chapter-url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/_m6HhdbyOqIC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA26 , chapter=Strict naturalism, purposeful explanation, and freedom , edition=Paperback , page=26 {{cite book , author=David Hodgson , title=Rationality + Consciousness = Free Will , chapter=Chapter 7: Science and determinism , isbn=9780199845309 , year=2012 , publisher=Oxford University Press , page=121 , url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/4SGsmowYARsC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA121 Hodgson relies upon the '' free will theorem'
12
of scientists John Conway and Simon Kochen based upon the role of the observer in quantum mechanics, which supports the view that "belief in determinism may thus come to be seen as notably ''unscientific''."
{{cite book , title=Information Processing and Living Systems , author=F.T. Hong , editor1=Vladimir B. Bajić , editor2=Tin Wee Tan , page=388 , url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/O_gIDoeB7WQC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA388 , quote=The origination of free will is an illusion from the third-person perspective. However, it is a reality from the first-person perspective. , isbn=9781860946882 , year=2005 , publisher=Imperial College Press {{cite book , url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/0iQAqQLd0AgC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA280 , page=280 , author=Jaegwon Kim , title=Supervenience and Mind: Selected Philosophical Essays , isbn=978-0521439961 , year=1993 , publisher=Cambridge University Press {{cite journal , author=Jaegwon Kim , year=1989 , title=The Myth of Non-Reductive Materialism , journal= Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association , volume= 63 , issue=3 , pages=31–47 , doi=10.2307/3130081, jstor=3130081 {{cite book , title=The Volitional Brain: Towards a Neuroscience of Free Will , chapter=Editors' introduction: The volitional brain , author=Benjamin Libet , author2=Anthony Freeman , author3=Keith Sutherland , pages=''ix''–''xxii'' , isbn=9780907845119 , year=2000 , publisher=Academic , chapter-url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/GygmUh51_AcC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PR9 {{cite book , title=Physicalism and Mental Causation: The Metaphysics of Mind and Action , editor1=Sven Walter , editor2=Heinz-Dieter Heckmann , chapter=Chapter 8: Varieties of causal closure, author=Barbara Montero , isbn=978-0907845461 , year=2003 , publisher=Imprint Academic , chapter-url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/4n_-DzEI1SkC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA173 , page=173 {{cite book , quote=But the laws of physics presuppose causal closure. Hence it follows that the behaviour of matter in the presence of a causally efficacious non-material mind cannot be fully governed by those laws., author=U Mohrhoff , page=166 , chapter-url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/GygmUh51_AcC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA166 , chapter=The physics of interactionism , editor= Benjamin Libet , editor2=Anthony Freeman , editor3=Keith Sutherland , isbn=9780907845119 , year=2000 , publisher=Academic , title=The Volitional Brain: Towards a Neuroscience of Free Will {{cite book , author=Thomas Nagel , title=Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False , quote= igher-level cognitive capacitiescannot be understood through physical science alone, and ... their existence cannot be explained by a version of evolutionary theory that is physically reductive. , chapter-url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/pOzNcdmhjIYC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA71 , page=71 , chapter=Chapter 4: Cognition , isbn=9780199919758 , year=2012 , publisher=Oxford University Press {{cite book, last=Popper and Eccles, first=Karl, title=The Self and its Brain, year=1977, publisher=Springer, location=New York, isbn=978-0415058988, pages=51 {{cite encyclopedia, encyclopedia=The Philosophy of Science: N-Z, Index , title=Physicalism, author1=Sahotra Sarkar , author2=Jessica Pfeifer , chapter-url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/b_ixzEzskwYC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA566 , chapter=Physicalism: The causal impact argument , isbn=978-0415977104 , year=2006 , publisher=Taylor & Francis, page=566 {{cite journal , author=Vicente, A. , title=On the Causal Completeness of Physics , journal=International Studies in the Philosophy of Science, volume=20 , issue=2 , pages=149–171 , year=2006, doi=10.1080/02698590600814332, url=http://philpapers.org/archive/VICOTC.pdf {{cite book, author1=Max Velmans, author2=Susan Schneider, title=The Blackwell Companion to Consciousness, url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/B1lRZmOzuJ0C?hl=en , access-date=6 February 2013, date=15 April 2008, publisher=John Wiley & Sons, isbn=978-0-470-75145-9 Causality Concepts in metaphysics Metaphysics of mind Dualism (philosophy of mind) Physicalism