Grouped events
In philosophy, a grouped event is the experience of two or more events that occur in sequence or concurrently that can be subsequently categorized.
Description
Grouped events can fall into categories depending upon whether the events are causal or acausal, and are with or without meaning. Causal events are related as the subsequent event are understood to be a consequence of the prior event.Meaning represents the purpose or significance of something.
Causality represents causal events grouped without meaning. These are common events.
Coincidence represents acausal events grouped without meaning. These are less common events.
Examples
A causality example is to strike a cue ball with a pool stick to make it move. The result is expected and has no meaning.A coincidence example is two friends from the same town finding each other at the same time in the town's library without any planning. The result is unexpected yet has no meaning.