In Philosophy a Proximate Cause is an event which is closest, or immediately responsible, for producing some observed result. This exists in contradistinction to a higher-level ultimate cause which is usually thought of as the "real reason" something occurred. The Philosopher (detail), by Rembrandt Philosophy is a study that includes various diverse subfields such as aesthetics, epistemology, ethics, logic, and metaphysics. ...
Example: Why did the ship sink?
Proximate cause: Because it was holed beneath the waterline, water entered the hull and the ship became heavier than the water which supported it, so it couldn't stay afloat.
Ultimate cause: Because the ship hit a rock which tore open the hole in the ship's hull.
In most situations, an ultimate cause may itself be a proximate cause for a further ultimate cause. Hence we can continue the above example as follows:
Example: Why did the ship hit the rock?
Proximate cause: Because the ship failed to change course to avoid it.
Ultimate cause: Because the ship was under autopilot and the autopilot received bad data from the GPS.
Separating proximate from ultimate causations frequently leads to better understandings of the events and systems concerned.
In Ethology: Ethology is the scientific study of animal behavior considered as a branch of zoology. ...
Proximate Causation: Explanation of an animal's behavior based on trigger stimuli and internal mechanisms.
Ultimate Causation: Explanation of an animal's behavior based on evolution - why this specific trait was favored by natural selection.
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Multi-level causation in the grounding of the cruise liner, the Royal Majesty.
In the law, a proximate cause is an event sufficiently related to a legally recognizable injury to be held the cause of that injury.
Since but-for causation is very easy to show (but for punching me in the face, you would not broken my jaw), there is a second test used to determine if an action is close enough to a harm in a "chain of events" to be legally valid.
The doctrine of proximate cause is notoriously confusing.