Definition of causalities Causalities

/kɔˌzæˈlɪtiz/ - [kozatliteez] -

We found 3 definitions of causalities from 2 different sources.

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What does causalities mean?

Wiktionary Wiktionary dictionary logo

  • causalities (Noun)
    Plural of causality.

Part of speech

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WordNet

WordNet by Princeton University

Noun

Plural: causalities

causality - the relation between causes and effects
  relation an abstraction belonging to or characteristic of two entities or parts together
= synonym
= antonym
= related word

Wiktionary Wiktionary dictionary logo

  • causality (Noun)
    The agency of a cause; the action or power of a cause, in producing its effect.

Webster DictionaryWebster's Unabridged Dictionary 📘

  • causality (n.)
    The agency of a cause; the action or power of a cause, in producing its effect.
  • causality (n.)
    The faculty of tracing effects to their causes.

OmegaWiki DictionaryOmegaWiki Dictionary Ω

  • causality
    The relation of cause and effect.

Wikipedia Wiktionary dictionary logo

  • Causality is a way to describe how different events relate to one another. Suppose there are two events "A" and "B". If "B" happens because "A" happened, then people say that A "is the cause" of B, or that B "is the effect of" A.

    What looks very simple, is in fact a difficult problem. Many people have tried to solve it, they have come up with different solutions

    Aristotle.

    Additionally, things can be causes of one another as hard work causes fitness, and vice versa.

    Aristotle told people of two types of causes: proper (prior) causes and accidental (chance) causes. Both types of causes, can be spoken as potential or as actual, particular or generic. The same language refers to the effects of causes; so that generic effects assigned to generic causes, particular effects to particular causes, and operating causes to actual effects. It is also essential that ontological causality does not suggest the temporal relation of before and after - between the cause and the effect; that spontaneity (in nature) and chance (in the sphere of moral actions) are among the causes of effects belonging to the efficient causation, and that no incidental, spontaneous, or chance cause can be prior to a proper, real, or underlying cause "per se".

    All investigations of causality coming later in history will consist in imposing a favorite hierarchy on the order (priority) of causes; such as "final > efficient > material > formal" (Aquinas), or in restricting all causality to the material and efficient

Part of speech

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Pronunciation

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Sign Language

causalities in sign language
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