Causality
Definition
The Causal dimension is a fundamental property of the Reality. Cause represents the relationship that links Agents/Forces acting on Acted/Fields to the Events, to the Action, and more generally the Derived Agents acting on Derived Fields to the (complex) Derived Action.
Common definition
(Link to Wikipedia page: Causality).
Description
The Causal Dimension manifests itself in a continuum that incessantly realizes the Formation (Creation and Evolution) of Reality and which extends itself from Uncertainty to Finality. This dimension is a metrics of the level of organization of the Structures of Information and the Forms that incessantly evolve in the Field, a measure of the complexity of Reality and the Forms that populate it. The milestones along this continuous dimension are:
- Uncertainty (chaos, casual order, minimum level of organization, minimum level of correlation between the events, etc.)
- Quantization (the quantum aspects include the strange behavior of the forces and the quantized structures, particles, etc.)
- Deterministic certainty (the organization of the classical forms of the ordinary reality, the objects of the ""normal"" reality)
- Finality (the higher level of expression of the dynamic and conservative aspects of the living forms).
See also
Classification
- Topic id: t_causality
- Belongs to the class: Dimensionalities of Reality
- Has as instances:
- Belongs to the groups:
- Semantic Map: ekm|map=m_reality&topic=t_causality
- Semantic Map Test Version: ekmt|map=m_reality&topic=t_causality