We could by no means deny the causal nexus between the boom of trade activities and domestic manufacturing capacity, which in our very modern theories would induce each other, especially when growth is on upswing.
12.
But if the original act was wilful it is generally held, though there is no explicit text, that intervening negligence of the injured person was no defence, though there was the same breach of causal nexus.
13.
J�ckel went on to accuse Nolte of engaging in a " post hoc, ergo propter hoc " argument to establish the " causal nexus " between Hitler's supposed fear of the " rat cage " torture, and the Holocaust.
14.
Instead of attempting to explain human behavior in terms of general causal laws, it aims to dissolve the causal nexus of the natural world : an analytic cure destroys the causal tie between a repression and its neurotic symptom, and thereby rescues the patient from the causal regime of nature.
15.
He acknowledged the validity of David Hume s attack on the popular but illusory notion of a causal nexus, extending it to a firm denial that laws of nature state what must occur ( admitting only that they state what will occur, a distinction that has remained unclear to many ).
16.
This prompted an epistolary exchange between the two of them in which Furet argued that both ideologies were Totalitarian twins that shared the same origins, while Nolte maintained his views of a " kausale Nexus " ( causal nexus ) between fascism and communism, to which the former had been a response.
17.
As she points out, a theology which makes no such claim to a particular revelation, in which God is rather conceived as everywhere and at all times available, while expanding a secular Enlightenment paradigm as to what is possible does not contravene the recognition that nature and history form a ( non-determinative ) causal nexus.
18.
Yet Salmon found causality ubiquitous in scientific explanation, which identifies not only natural laws ( empirical regularities ), but accounts for them via nature's structure and thereby involves the ontic ( concerning reality ), how the phenomenon " fits into the causal nexus " of the world ( Salmon's causal / mechanical explanation ).
19.
So if a word ( say, " Tony-Blair " ) is located inside an entity ( e . g ., oneself ) that can use the word and pick out its referent, then the word's wide meaning consists of both the means that that entity uses to pick out its referent, and the referent itself : a wide causal nexus between ( 1 ) a head, ( 2 ) a word inside it, ( 3 ) an object outside it, and ( 4 ) whatever " processing " is required in order to successfully connect the inner word to the outer object.
20.
In his 2005 book " The Russian Roots of Nazism : White �migr�s and The Making of National Socialism ", the American historian Michael Kellogg argued that there were two extremes of thinking about the origins of National Socialism with Nolte arguing for a " causal nexus " between Communism in Russia and Nazism in Germany while the other extreme was represented by the American historian Daniel Goldhagen's theories about a unique German culture of " eliminationist " anti-Semitism Kellogg argued that his book represented an attempt at adopting a middle position between Nolte s and Goldhagen s positions, but that he leaned closer to Nolte s, contending that anti-Bolshevik and anti-Semitic Russian �migr�s played a key and underappreciated role in the 1920s in the development of Nazi ideology with their influence on Nazi thinking about Judeo-Bolshevism being especially notable