It is a commonplace that correlation does not imply causality, however eyebrow-wagglingly suggestive it may be of causal hypotheses. It is less commonly noted that causality does not imply correlation either. It is quite possible for two variables to have zero correlation, and yet for one of them to be completely determined by the other.

Emphasis added here and below.
Causation, Prediction, and Search, page 31:
Wikipedia on correlation:
Spirtes's example on page 71 looks like a linear Gaussian causal system. In a linear Gaussian causal system, uncorrelation is identical with simple marginal independence, and it can imply complete conditional independence.
Yes, I think this is true for values of a function and its derivative sampled at single uniformly random times (for a limit sense of "uniform").