Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Causative. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Causative Quotes And Sayings by 90 Authors including Ervin Seale,Swami Vivekananda,Karen Marie Moning,Agatha Christie,S.f. Chapman for you to enjoy and share.
It is what you think of this situation that governs you and not the situation itself. Causation is always in mind and not in things.
As the cause is, so the effect will be Cause is never different from effect, the effect is but the cause reproduced in another form.
If you control the cause you own the effect. If you don't, events will unfold like dominoes toppling and you will have no one to blame but yourself.
To get at the cause for a thing, we must study the effect.
Every object and event must have a plausible chain of causality that leads to it.
Responsible, who wants to be responsible? Whenever something bad happens, it's always, who's responsible for this?
Instead of seeking to pinpoint blame, seek to understand cause.
In a healthy system, there is no blame.
Nothing can be produced without a cause, and the effect is but the cause reproduced.
Cause and effect are rarely directly related. Justice has a mind of her own.
There is no fault, only responsibility.
Blame is especially useful in situations in which there is no apparent villain-those moments that prove, despite our advancement of learning, how susceptible we are to high winds and wet roads.
The first cause worked automatically like a somnambulist, and not reflectively like a sage.
The notion of "cause and effect" is sometimes useful in real life, and it can even be interesting in art, but I'm more interested in "cause and cause" or "effect and effect" or "and and and".
Everyone is responsible and no one is to blame.
One of the first things taught in introductory statistics textbooks is that correlation is not causation. It is also one of the first things forgotten.
Every action, thought, and feeling is motivated by an intention, and that intention is a cause that exists as one with an effect.
My fault? It could be. So much was my fault, the result of my actions or decisions. Sabina
The exercise was meant to illustrate the powerful instinct people have for finding causes for any effect, and also for creating narratives. "The
The final cause, then, produces motion through being loved.
The only coherent explanation of contingent intentionality is the existence of some necessary being, an agent from whom all other intentionality derives but who does not require further explanation.
to be placed on the root cause as well as
Blame is a human concept, one of its blackest and most selfish and self-binding.
Blame is just a lazy person's way of making sense of chaos.
When you do not take responsibilities for your actions you blame others.
While you are not responsible for the actions of another, you are able to consciously respond to everything in your reality. Your power to respond is your power to create.
When actions are followed by events that are not causally related to the prior acts, people often erroneously perceive contingencies that do not, in fact, exist
Either our wills are determined by prior causes and we are not responsible for them, or they are the product of chance and we are not responsible for them. If
The person who commits an action is the one responsible for it, not the people he commits the action upon.
The complexities of cause and effect defy analysis.
Everything, all the time, is causing everything else.
attribution theory
Blame is such a self-defeating choice. It renders one helpless, putting any solution well out of reach, for we rarely can change others. Consider this, a solution well within your reach, someone you can surely change: Yourself.
But the cause didn't matter. All that mattered was the effect.
Buddha teaches that there are many causes and many conditions and always refers to causes and conditions in the plural, never just as cause and effect. We are presented with a very complex picture of how things work.
The central problem of novel-writing is causality.
It is the unforeseeable that creates the event.
Remember that Caligula was not a cause, he was an effect.
The cause is hidden. The effect is visible to all.
no fault greater than the wish to be getting.
However, correlation does not necessarily imply causation. The fact that people tend to carry umbrellas when it rains creates a high correlation between umbrella carrying and rain showers. However, it is obvious that choosing to carry an umbrella does not cause rainfall.
Hume is thus led to the view that, when we say 'A causes B', we mean only that A and B are constantly conjoined in fact, not that there is some necessary connection between them.
Fate, no doubt, had a hand in it.
Almost all unhappiness in life comes from the tendency to blame someone else.
Causation extraction makes Jack a dull reader.
Everything in nature is a cause from which there flows some effect.
Nothing could make one responsible but the Responsibilities
All successful men have agreed in one thing
they were causationists. They believed that things went not by luck, but by law; that there was not a weak or a cracked link in the chain that joins the first and last of things.
Blaming has no positive effect at all
You are
never responsible for the actions of others; you are only responsible for you.
I'm convinced that responsibility is some kind of psychological disease.
EFFECT, n. The second of two phenomena which always occur together in the same order. The first, called a Cause, is said to generate the other-which is no more sensible than it would be for one who has never seen a dog except in pursuit of a rabbit to declare the rabbit the cause of the dog.
It is intent which establishes one's consequential outcomes.
People in cars cause accidents and accidents in cars cause people.
It is often interesting, in retrospect, to consider the trifling causes that lead to great events. A chance encounter, a thoughtless remark - and the tortuous chain reaction of coincidence is set in motion, leading with devious inevitability to some resounding climax.
Does a pistol murder a man? Or is it the man who pulls the trigger? Can we blame a rabid dog who tears apart a child? Or should we blame the one who kicked and starved and tortured it?
One fault begets another; one crime renders another necessary.
All causes are essentially mental, and whosoever comes into daily contact with a high order of thinking must take on some of it.
Our lives are the results of our choices. To blame and accuse other people, the environment, or other extrinsic factors is to choose to empower those things to control us.
Blaming is so much easier than taking responsibility, because if you take responsibility ... then you might be to blame.
Cause and effect, means and ends, seed and fruit cannot be severed; for the effect already blooms in the cause, the end preexists in the means, the fruit in the seed
Logic is a poor model of cause and effect.
While the powers of the Primal Cause lie in causation, it shows itself in process through thoughts, perception and conception. It is the power of the Primal Cause to decipher what is perceived from the ordered plane and conceive judgments through thoughts from the unordered.
Whatever else one may say about guilt, it certainly lends one diabolical powers of invention;
All events are but the consummation of preceding causes, clearly seen but not distinctly apprehended.
Things which as effects presuppose others as causes cannot be reciprocally at the same time causes of these.
Something happens because something happens because something happens-- Jan Gehl
A CAUSE is an object precedent and contiguous to another, and so united with it that the idea of the one determines the mind to form the idea of the other, and the impression of the one to form a more lively idea of the other.
There's more to life than cause and effect.
Blame is a neat little device that you can use whenever you don't want to take responsibility for something in your life. Use it and you will avoid all risks and impede your own growth.
People that take responsibility are often given responsibility!
automatic search for causes shapes our thinking,
INTENTIONS + ACTION = WILL
Understanding proximate cause is also like understanding your mother: It can take years and then, just when you think you have her figured out, she surprises you.
The transition from cause to effect, from event to event, is often carried on by secret steps, which our foresight cannot divine, and our sagacity is unable to trace.
If you prove the cause, you at once prove the effect; and conversely nothing can exist without its cause.
To be responsible is to be the uncontested author of an event or thing.
I have no way of knowing whether the events that I am about to narrate are effects or causes.
Study carefully the law of cause and effect.
The simplest and most obvious cause which can there be assigned for any phenomena, is probably the true one.
Self-complacency is pleasure accompanied by the idea of oneself as cause.
Consider a world in which cause and effect are erratic. Sometimes the first precedes the second, and sometimes the second the first. Or perhaps cause lies forever in the past effect in the future, but future and past are intertwined.
The causes being known, the knowledge of the effects is sure to follow.
The word 'cause' is an altar to an unknown god.
We need only reflect on what has been prov'd at large, that we are never sensible of any connexion betwixt causes and effects, and that 'tis only by our experience of their constant conjunction, we can arrive at any knowledge of this relation.
It often happens that we blurt out things that may in some kind of way be harmful to us, but we are silent about things that may make us look ridiculous; because in this case effect follows very quickly on cause.
The human brain has evolved the capacity to impose a narrative, complete with chronology and cause-and-effect logic, on whatever it encounters, no matter how apparently random.
The same thing may have all the kinds of causes, e.g. the moving cause of a house is the art or the builder, the final cause is the function it fulfils, the matter is earth and stones, and the form is the definitory formula.
A problem solved is a problem caused.
When you believe that your problem is caused by someone or something else, you become your own victim.
Placing the blame or judgment on someone else leaves you powerless to change your experience; taking responsibility for your beliefs and judgments gives you the power to change them
The victim mindset produces a delusion of fault and blame that blinds you from the simple truth of cause and effect.
Beliefs are the determinants of what one experiences. There are no external 'causes.'
For a person to feel responsible for his actions, he must sense that the behavior has flowed from the self.
I am responsible. Although I may not be able to prevent the worst from happening, I am responsible for my attitude toward the inevitable misfortunes that darken life.
Blame is the dumbest thing a person can do. It always puts the control in someone else's hands. I'm always responsible for what happens to me and therefore I can change it.
Desire and force between them are responsible for all our actions; desire causes our voluntary acts, force our involuntary.
If two or more instances of the phenomenon under investigation have only one circumstance in common, the circumstance in which alone all the instances agree is the cause (or effect) of the given phenomenon.
Blaming other people inevitably makes us blame ourselves because if we are pointing the finger at someone, practically, we are pointing it at ourselves as well.
All of life presents itself as a cycle of cause and effect. When this cycle is negative, there are three ways to change. You can change the cause, change the effect, or choose the most powerful option become the cause!