Causation is the theory that something routinely occurred; either by normal sequential action (e.g.: the rain falls - thereby causing the the street to be wet), or
by complete chance (e.g.: your house is hit by a meteorite - thereby causing a hole in your roof).
You will have to take this meaning and determine yourself how it might equate to the law.
No. Causation is a legal terminology to determine standards of justice which do not normally exist in nature.
it when one event starts another event
causation was before gravitation and gravitation is relative where as causation is sourced from the first cause..so I would posit that gravitation is the consequence of a subsequent cause
The direct result of an action
element of tort law. -duty -breach -causation -damages
Douglas Hodgson has written: 'Individual Duty Within a Human Rights Discourse (Applied Legal Philosophy)' 'The law of intervening causation' -- subject(s): Causation, Liability (Law)
There is a long chain of causation that stretches back almost 14 billion years to the Big Bang.
Causation may lead to belief in God because people who believe in God believe he does not need a cause so he started the cause and effect chain.
The answer would be: It confuses correlation with causation.
What is a causation Chart?
The blast was causation of the mis-handling of the chemicals. It is the sentence with causation inside it.
Legality, Mens rea, Actus Reus, Causation, Concurrence, Harm, and Punishment