Forks of Salmon is a town of Siskiyou County in northern California, USA. The town is situated between the north and south forks of the Salmon River, hence its name.
Salmon's criticism of this is precisely that it is formulated in epistemic terms, "for the existence of the vast majority of causal processes in the history of the universe is quite independent of human knowers." (1984, p.
Salmon considers a case where a moving spot is marked by a red filter held up close to the wall.
Salmon's counterfactual requirement that the process would remain uniform (presumably in the absence of the marking interaction, all other things being equal) does not help in these cases: the shadow would have remained uniform had the fence not fallen.
This year's salmon harvest in the Pacific has been so abundant — some already call it the best since a record haul 15 years ago — that California commercial fishermen spent yesterday giving away hundreds of the fish.
In an average year, California fishermen catch between 300,000 and 400,000 fish in the Pacific, according to Chuck Tracy of the fishery management council, which regulates sport and commercial fishing in the ocean.
Salmon in Southcentral Puget Sound (Area 11): Fishing since the opener has been slow to fair at the Clay Banks and slag pile off Point Defiance Park in Tacoma, Point Dalco on the south side of Vashon Island, Dolphin Point on the northeast side of Vashon Island and south of Southworth ferry landing.