If event A occurs then event B will follow. Is causation really that simple? Causation exists only if it is the case that certain events actually cause others. David Hume questioned the assumption of causation in his work A Treatise of Human Nature. This rocked the world of philosophy from its core teachings. Of course, a great question deserves a great response. Immanuel Kant attempted such an answer. Kant argued that a cause necessarily leads to the effect. This is in direct opposition to Hume’s argument that cause probably leads to the effect observed. An example would be of a child jumping into a still pool of water. One would expect that there would be some sort of disturbance of the water. Is this presumption a valid conclusion given ...