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Part I: Causal Reasoning in the Context of Normative and Descriptive Psychology: Configuration of Causality and Philosophy of Psychology: An Analysis of Causality as Intervention and Its Repercussion for Psychology / Wenceslao J. Gonzalez. Normative Theory and Descriptive Psychology in Understanding Causal Reasoning: The Role of Interventions and InvarianceIn Wenceslao J. Gonzalez (ed.), Philosophy of Psychology: Causality and Psychological Subject: New Reflections on James Woodward’s Contribution, De Gruyter. 2018.
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122Irreversible (One-hit) and Reversible (Sustaining) CausationPhilosophy of Science 89 (5): 889-898. 2022.This paper explores a distinction among causal relationships that has yet to receive attention in the philosophical literature, namely, whether causal relationships are reversible or irreversible. We provide an analysis of this distinction and show how it has important implications for causal inference and modeling. This work also clarifies how various familiar puzzles involving preemption and over-determination play out differently depending on whether the causation involved is reversible.
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202Downward Causation DefendedIn Jan Voosholz & Markus Gabriel (eds.), Top-Down Causation and Emergence, Springer Verlag. pp. 217-251. 2021.This paper defends the notion of downward causation. I will seek to elucidate this notion, explain why it is a useful way of thinking, and respond to criticisms attacking its intelligibility. My account of downward causation will be in many respects similar to the account recently advanced by Ellis. The overall framework I will adopt is the interventionist treatment of causation I have defended elsewhere: X causes Y when Y changes under a suitable manipulation of X. When X is at a higher “level”…Read more
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171Explaining ExplanationPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 56 (2): 477-481. 1996.Reviewed Work: Explaining Explanation by David-Hillel Ruben
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207Physical modality, laws, and counterfactualsSynthese 197 (5). 2017.Standard philosophical accounts attempt to understand physical modality either in terms of special metaphysical entities and relationships or in terms of the organization of non-modal information, as in Best Systems Analysis. This paper defends an alternative to both these approaches in which invariance and various independence conditions play a central role. The methodological importance of separating law-claims from claims about initial and boundary conditions is highlighted.
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483Sensitive and insensitive causationPhilosophical Review 115 (1): 1-50. 2006.Sensitive and Insensitive Causation
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554Independence, invariance and the causal Markov conditionBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 50 (4): 521-583. 1999.This essay explains what the Causal Markov Condition says and defends the condition from the many criticisms that have been launched against it. Although we are skeptical about some of the applications of the Causal Markov Condition, we argue that it is implicit in the view that causes can be used to manipulate their effects and that it cannot be surrendered without surrendering this view of causation.
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262Causal Complexity, Conditional Independence, and Downward CausationPhilosophy of Science 87 (5): 857-867. 2020.This article defends the notion of downward causation, relating it to a notion of conditional independence.
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281Explanation, invariance, and interventionPhilosophy of Science 64 (4): 41. 1997.This paper defends a counterfactual account of explanation, according to which successful explanation requires tracing patterns of counterfactual dependence of a special sort, involving what I call active counterfactuals. Explanations having this feature must appeal to generalizations that are invariant--stable under certain sorts of changes. These ideas are illustrated by examples drawn from physics and econometrics.
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82Review of Scientific Explanation and the Causal Structure of the WorldNoûs 22 (2): 322-324. 1988.
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364Some Varieties of Non-Causal ExplanationIn Alexander Reutlinger & Juha Saatsi (eds.), Explanation Beyond Causation: Philosophical Perspectives on Non-Causal Explanations, Oxford University Press. pp. 117-138. 2018.This chapter explores the possibility of weakening the criteria for causal explanation in Making Things Happen to yield various forms of non-causal explanation. These include the following: retaining the idea that explanations must answer what if things had been different questions but dropping the requirement the answers to such questions must take the form of claims about what would happen under interventions. Retaining the w- question requirement but allowing generalizations that hold for mat…Read more
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203Laws: An Invariance-Based AccountIn Walter Ott & Lydia Patton (eds.), Laws of Nature, Oxford University Press. 2018.This paper defends an invariance-based account of laws of nature: Laws are generalizations that remain invariant under various sorts of changes. Alternatively, laws are generalizations that exhibit a certain kind of independence from background conditions.
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320Explanatory autonomy: the role of proportionality, stability, and conditional irrelevanceSynthese 198 (1): 1-29. 2018.This paper responds to recent criticisms of the idea that true causal claims, satisfying a minimal “interventionist” criterion for causation, can differ in the extent to which they satisfy other conditions—called stability and proportionality—that are relevant to their use in explanatory theorizing. It reformulates the notion of proportionality so as to avoid problems with previous formulations. It also introduces the notion of conditional independence or irrelevance, which I claim is central to…Read more
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157The Chances of Explanation: Causal Explanation in the Social, Medical and Physical Sciences. Paul HumphreysPhilosophy of Science 60 (4): 671-673. 1993.
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1Philosophical Perspectives on Causal Reasoning in Biology. Minnesota Studies in Philosophy of Science. Vol. XXI. (edited book)University of Minnesota Press. forthcoming.
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500II—James Woodward: Mechanistic Explanation: Its Scope and LimitsAristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 87 (1): 39-65. 2013.This paper explores the question of whether all or most explanations in biology are, or ideally should be, ‘mechanistic’. I begin by providing an account of mechanistic explanation, making use of the interventionist ideas about causation I have developed elsewhere. This account emphasizes the way in which mechanistic explanations, at least in the biological sciences, integrate difference‐making and spatio‐temporal information, and exhibit what I call fine‐tunedness of organization. I also emphas…Read more
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214Causation in ScienceIn Paul Humphreys (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Science, Oxford University Press. pp. 163-184. 2014.This article discusses some philosophical theories of causation and their application to several areas of science. Topics addressed include regularity, counterfactual, and causal process theories of causation; the causal interpretation of structural equation models and directed graphs; independence assumptions in causal reasoning; and the role of causal concepts in physics. In connection with this last topic, this article focuses on the relationship between causal asymmetries, the time-reversal …Read more
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86This paper, like its companion explores some ways in which, on the one hand, normative theorizing about causation and causal reasoning and, on the other, empirical psychological investigations into causal cognition can be mutually illuminating. The topics considered include the connection between causal claims and claims about the outcomes of interventions and the various ways that invariance claims figure in causal judgment.
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109This paper, like its companion explores some ways in which, on the one hand, normative theorizing about causation and causal reasoning and, on the other, empirical psychological investigations into causal cognition can be mutually illuminating. The paper carries out this exploration in connection with a variety of topics—the role of information about the presence of a “physical connection” between cause and effect in causal judgment, the role of “proportionality” in choosing the appropriate “lev…Read more
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153Interventionism and the Missing Metaphysics: A DialogIn Matthew Slater & Zanja Yudell (eds.), Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Science: New Essays, Oxford University Press. pp. 193-228. 2017.A number of philosophers with a metaphysical orientation have criticized Making Things Happen for its failure to provide an account of the metaphysical foundations or grounds or truth-makers for causal and explanatory claims. This dialog attempts to respond to these objections and to raise some general concerns about some of the rhetoric and argumentative strategies employed in contemporary analytic metaphysics. It also explores some issues having to do with the relationship between methodology,…Read more
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117This paper discusses Peter Menzies' work on the exclusion argument. I defend an interventionist treatment of the argument that differs in some respects from the approach advocated by Menzies and Christian List.
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138This paper explores some interactions between normative/ philosophical/theoretical theorizing about causation and empirical research into causal reasoning and judgment of the sort conducted by psychologists and others. I attempt to extract some general morals regarding the kinds of interactions between the empirical and the more traditionally philosophical that in my experience have been most fruitful. I also compare the experimental work on which I focus with some of the research strategies emp…Read more
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600Methodology, ontology, and interventionismSynthese 192 (11): 3577-3599. 2015.This paper defends an interventionist account of causation by construing this account as a contribution to methodology, rather than as a set of theses about the ontology or metaphysics of causation. It also uses the topic of causation to raise some more general issues about the relation between, on the one hand, methodology, and, on the other hand, ontology and metaphysics, as these are understood in contemporary philosophical discussion, particularly among so-called analytic metaphysicians. It …Read more
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(b. 1939) are professors at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California. Woodward teaches philosophy; Goodstein teaches physics. Woodward has served Caltech as executive officer (review)Environmental Ethics: Divergence and Convergence. forthcoming.
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98Causes, Conditions, and the Pragmatics of Causal ExplanationIn Gregory J. Morgan (ed.), Philosophy of Science Matters: The Philosophy of Peter Achinstein, Oxford University Press. pp. 247. 2011.
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135Book ReviewsRonald Giere, Science Without Laws. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press , x+ 285pp. $25.00 (review)Philosophy of Science 69 (2): 379-384. 2002.
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157Supervenience and Singular Causal StatementsRoyal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 27 211-246. 1990.In his recent book, Causation: A Realistic Approach , Michael Tooley discusses the following thesis, which he calls the ‘thesis of the Humean Supervenience of Causal Relations’: The truth values of all singular causal statements are logically determined by the truth values of statements of causal laws, together with the truth values of non-causal statements about particulars . represents one version of the ‘Humean’ idea that there is no more factual content to the claim that two particular event…Read more
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116Gravity, Inertia, and Quantum Vacuum Zero Point FieldsFoundations of Physics 31 (5): 819-835. 2001.Over the past several years Haisch, Rueda, and others have made the claim that the origin of inertial reaction forces can be explained as the interaction of electrically charged elementary particles with the vacuum electromagnetic zero-point field expected on the basis of quantum field theory. After pointing out that this claim, in light of the fact that the inertial masses of the hadrons reside in the electrically chargeless, photon-like gluons that bind their constituent quarks, is untenable, …Read more
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78Book Reviews: Time: A Traveler's Guide. By Clifford A. Pickover. Oxford University Press, New York, 1998, xviii +285 pp., 815.95 (softcover, 1999). ISBN 0-19-513096-0. Surfing Through Hyperspace: Understanding Higher Universes in Six Easy Lessons. By Clifford A. Pickover. Oxford University Press, New York, 1999, xxiv +239 pp., 825.00 (hardcover). ISBN 0-19-513006-5 (review)Foundations of Physics 30 (1): 165-170. 2000.
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Biology |
| General Philosophy of Science |