Causality (as a psychological phenomenon)

Perception of cause-effect relationships among objects.  The roots of this interpretation of causality lie with David Hume (1711-1776) who argued that causality is not a logical relationship waiting to be discovered, but rather is based on inferences derived from experiencing a succession of events.  With this contention, he shifted the study of causality from logic to psychology.

See Causality (in philosophy)