Causal [adjective]

Definition of Causal:

fresh, new

Opposite/Antonyms of Causal:


Sentence/Example of Causal:

The AI community is realizing how important causal reasoning could be for machine learning and are scrambling to find ways to bolt it on.

Because nothing, not even information, can travel faster than light, the edge of this circle is a hard boundary on the causal influence of the original event.

A team led by David Lyons, a behavioral neuroscientist at Stanford University, reported causal evidence last November in Scientific Reports.

A direct causal relationship between the coronavirus crisis and piracy is yet to be established.

Its performance is unreliable, causal understanding is shaky, and incoherence is a constant companion.

As causes precede effects, the causal order and the time order generally coincide.

The empirical law derives whatever truth it has, from the causal laws of which it is a consequence.

The really scientific truths, then, are not these empirical laws, but the causal laws which explain them.

The dualism is not primarily as to the stuff of the world, but as to causal laws.

The first act is thus for us, the thinkers, not a part of the causal events, but a purposive intention towards an ideal.