JK,
But the data at best is correlative not causal, and the problem with you lot is that you are taking that leap of faith for no other reason than your confirmation bias; a preordained conclusion.
Leaving aside who “you lot” might be, you’re off here on two counts.
The first is Hume’s problem of causality, which he put as follows:
“
We then call the one object, cause; the other, effect. We suppose that there is some connexion between them; some power in the one, by which it infallibly produces the other, and operates with the greatest certainty and strongest necessity.”
It’s a problem no-one since has resolved – if a cricket ball hits a greenhouse and a window breaks, there’s still no way to eliminate the possibility at least that something else caused it to break.
Second, there is no “leap of faith” here at all. Yes, the data is correlative and how close it is to reasonably being thought to be casual is moot. Fortunately though it’s not an issue we need to consider as the only claim made so far is that emergence provides a cogent working
hypothesis, and not that it’s a rounded theory.
It’s also incidentally the only hypothesis in town with a coherent rationale to support it.