...or Immanent to a "Time now" point with Space and Particles positional representations superimposed on a Universe-Scaled Field of Transcendence for Mind to Measure and therefore Comprehend?
If you blinked, you'd miss it. You wouldn't see the transcendental wave function collapse.
Google AI:
In the realm of causality, immanent and emergent relations represent different ways in which causes and effects relate to each other. Immanent causation describes a situation where the cause and effect are intimately linked, with the effect existing within the cause. Emergent causation, on the other hand, refers to situations where new properties or behaviors arise at higher levels of organization, without being directly present in the lower-level components.
Immanent Causation:
- An immanent cause is one whose effect is inherent and inseparable from the cause itself. The effect is contained within the cause and cannot exist independently of it.
- Fire and light are often cited as an example of immanent causation, as the light emitted by fire is a direct and inseparable consequence of the fire itself.
- Immanence can be understood in the context of philosophical discussions about the nature of reality, where immanent causes might be associated with the idea of a "whole" or a unified system where everything is interconnected.
Emergent Causation:
- Emergent causation describes situations where new properties or behaviors appear at a higher level of organization that are not simply a sum of the properties of the lower-level components.
- The emergent properties of consciousness in the brain, or the liquidity of water, are often cited as examples of emergent causation, where these properties are not directly present in the individual atoms or molecules that make up the brain or water.
- Emergent causation is relevant in many scientific fields, including physics, biology, and computer science, where researchers study the emergence of complex behaviors from simpler underlying mechanisms.
Measure Twice - Cut Once - Theories of Everything - Science or Philosophy?