A Quote by Swami Vivekananda

All law has its essence in causation. — © Swami Vivekananda
All law has its essence in causation.
The law of Karma is the law of causation.
All is bound by the law of causation
The enlightened man is one with the law of causation.
Everything, both mental and physical, is rigidly bound by the law of causation.
If there is anything in the world which I do firmly believe in, it is the universal validity of the law of causation.
Religion belongs to the realm that is inviolable before the law of causation and therefore closed to science.
Internal and external nature, mind and matter, are in time and space, and are bound by the law of causation.
A certain motion becomes understood when it is referred to a force; certain sensations, to matter; certain changes outside, to law; certain changes in thought, to mind; certain order singly, to causation - and joined to time, to law.
If ... we choose a group of social phenomena with no antecedent knowledge of the causation or absence of causation among them, then the calculation of correlation coefficients, total or partial, will not advance us a step toward evaluating the importance of the causes at work.
The essence of tyranny is not iron law. It is capricious law.
As for the law of moral causation ('karma'): this is human justice dressed up as cosmic justice and then imputed to the impersonal workings of the natural world.
Often the features metaphysicians are interested in, like causation, time, and essence, involve features that seem so basic or are so generally embedded in the way we experience the world that it takes special attention and focus to draw them out and develop an account of their nature.
The English practice of accommodating the rules of commercial law to commercial practice. The line of causation ran from economic need to legal response
The whole idea of what is evidence for causation in epidemiology cannot be separated from tTindustry understood that if they could raise doubt about how you could conclude something caused cancer, that they put so much effort into getting so many receptive public health authorities to say, "Well, causation requires that these five things be met." So that is, in fact, nonsense.
The natural law is, in essence, a profoundly 'radical' ethic, for it holds the existing status quo, which might grossly violate natural law, up to the unsparing and unyielding light of reason.
The essence of oneself and the essence of the world: these two are one. [ The aim is not to see, but to realize that one is, that essence; then one is free to wander as that essence in the world.] Hence separateness, withdrawal, is no longer necessary. Wherever the hero may wander, whatever he may do, he is ever in the presence of his own essence-for he has the perfected eye to see.
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