Kauzalitás
lecture course ( in Hungarian)
(Mon 18:00 - 19:30, TTK, Déli Tömb
0-820 Hunfalvy János terem)
Kódok:
FLN-300
BMA-FILD-401
BBN-FIL-401
BMA-LOTD-206
VKN-66
BMI-LOTD-206E
xxxn9512
>>>The same lecture in English: Thu 16:00 - 17:30, i/-104
What does causation
consist in, and, depending on the possible answers, what are the basic
characteristics of a causal relationship? -- this is the main topic of
the lecture course. We shall also discuss the most important
contexts of causality: the relationship of causality to concepts of
explanation, law-like regularity, statistical correlation, time,
modality, and logical inference. Our considerations will be based on the
analysis of the causal narratives in our scientific, first of all,
physical theories; rather than our every day experiences or common sense
intuition.
The lecture slides: pdf
Further suggested readings:
- E. Szabó László: A nyitott jövő
problémája - véletlen, kauzalitás és determinizmus a fizikában,
Typotex Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 2002. (A könyv javított digitális
kiadása PDF formában letölthető innen.)
- Causation, Oxford Readings in Philosophy, E. Sosa and M. Tooley, eds., Oxford University Press (1997)
- Huoranszki F. (2001): Modern metafizika, Osiris Kiadó, Budapest.
- Belnap, N. (1992): Branching space-time, Synthese 92, 385.
-
H. Reichenbach: The philosophy
of space and time, Dover Publications, New York, 1958.
- G. Hofer-Szabó, M. Rédei, L. E. Szabó: The Principle of the Common Cause, Cambridge University Press, 2013.
- E.
Szabó László, Gyenis Balázs,
Gyenis Zalán, Rédei Miklós, Szabó
Gábor: Korrelációk kauzális
magyarázata, Magyar
Filozófiai Szemle, 54.
(2010) 78. old.
- The
Einstein--Podolsky--Rosen Argument
and the Bell Inequalities, Internet
Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2008)
2014-02-04
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TTK-s és IK-s BSc hallgatók!
Filozófia
minor
TTK-s
és IK-s BSc hallgatók!
Logika és
tudományelmélet MA szak
benne
A
fizika filozófiája
vagy
A
matematika filozófiája
alprogrammal!
(in
English)
The
program focuses
on logic and its
applications in the
philosophy of science,
particularly in the
foundations of
mathematics, physics,
linguistics and the social
sciences. Beyond a few
core courses and a joint
four-semester seminar
series aimed at providing
a common background to all
students, we offer the
following four modules:
- Logic and the
Philosophy of
Mathematics
- Philosophy of Physics
- Logic in
Linguistics
- Models in the
Social Sciences
Students
have to select one of
these modules based on
their personal field of
interest.
>>> Further details
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