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Christopher Hitchcock

California Institute of Technology
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    95
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 More details
  • California Institute of Technology
    Division of Humanities and Social Sciences
    Professor
University of Pittsburgh
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1993
APA Western Division
CV
Homepage
Pasadena, California, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Theories of Causation
Causal Modeling
Causal Reasoning
Varieties of Causation
Causation
Experimental Philosophy: Causation
Explanation
Theories of Explanation
Explanation in the Sciences
Varieties of Explanation
Formal Epistemology
Probabilistic Reasoning
Probabilistic Puzzles
Sleeping Beauty
Doomsday Argument
Decision Theory
Causal Decision Theory
Newcomb's Problem
Philosophy of Probability
Chance and Objective Probability
Bayesian Reasoning
Probabilistic Principles
17 more
Areas of Interest
Inference to the Best Explanation
Scientific Realism
Subjective Probability
Betting Interpretations and Dutch Books
Conditional Probability
Degrees of Belief
Confirmation
Induction
Direct Inference Principles
Probability in the Physical Sciences
Applications of Probability
Simplicity and Parsimony
Historical Linguistics
David Lewis
Intuition
Formal Social Epistemology
Epistemology of Disagreement
Epistemology of Testimony
Philosophical Methods
Conceptual Analysis
Inductive Logic
Judgment Aggregation
Philosophy of Biology
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
Philosophy of Mathematics
Philosophy of Physical Science
Psychology
Mathematics
Statistics
24 more
  • All publications (95)
  •  156
    Trumping and contrastive causation
    Synthese 181 (2). 2011.
    Jonathan Schaffer introduced a new type of causal structure called 'trumping'. According to Schaffer, trumping is a species of causal preemption. Both Schaffer and I have argued that causation has a contrastive structure. In this paper, I analyze the structure of trumping cases from the perspective of contrastive causation, and argue that the case is much more complex than it first appears. Nonetheless, there is little reason to regard trumping as a species of causal preemption.
    Theories of CausationCounterfactual Theories of Causation
  •  236
    Portable Causal Dependence: A Tale of Consilience
    Philosophy of Science 79 (5): 942-951. 2012.
    This article describes research pursued by members of the McDonnell Collaborative on Causal Learning. A number of members independently converged on a similar idea: one of the central functions served by claims of actual causation is to highlight patterns of dependence that are highly portable into novel contexts. I describe in detail how this idea emerged in my own work and also in that of the psychologist Tania Lombrozo. In addition, I use the occasion to reflect on the nature of interdiscipli…Read more
    This article describes research pursued by members of the McDonnell Collaborative on Causal Learning. A number of members independently converged on a similar idea: one of the central functions served by claims of actual causation is to highlight patterns of dependence that are highly portable into novel contexts. I describe in detail how this idea emerged in my own work and also in that of the psychologist Tania Lombrozo. In addition, I use the occasion to reflect on the nature of interdisciplinary collaboration in general and on the interaction between philosophy and psychology in particular.
    Counterfactual Theories of CausationExperimental Philosophy: CausationSingular CausationCausal Reaso…Read more
    Counterfactual Theories of CausationExperimental Philosophy: CausationSingular CausationCausal Reasoning, MiscPsychology of LearningDevelopmental Psychology
  •  1
    Do All and Only Causes Raise the Probabilities of Effects?
    In John Collins, Ned Hall & Laurie Paul (eds.), Causation and Counterfactuals, Mit Press. 2004.
    Probabilistic Causation
  •  491
    Contrastive explanation and the demons of determinism
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 50 (4): 585-612. 1999.
    It it tempting to think that if an outcome had some probability of not occurring, then we cannot explain why that outcome in fact occurred. Despite this intuition, most philosophers of science have come to admit the possibility of indeterministic explanation. Yet some of them continue to hold that if an outcome was not determined, it cannot be explained why that outcome rather than some other occurred. I argue that this is an untenable compromise: if indeterministic explanation is possible, then…Read more
    It it tempting to think that if an outcome had some probability of not occurring, then we cannot explain why that outcome in fact occurred. Despite this intuition, most philosophers of science have come to admit the possibility of indeterministic explanation. Yet some of them continue to hold that if an outcome was not determined, it cannot be explained why that outcome rather than some other occurred. I argue that this is an untenable compromise: if indeterministic explanation is possible, then indeterministic contrastive explanation is possible too. In order to defend this conclusion, I develop an account of contrastive explanation.
    Chance and DeterminismContext and Context-Dependence, MiscExplanation and Laws of Nature
  •  527
    Explanatory generalizations, part I: A counterfactual account
    with James Woodward
    Noûs 37 (1). 2003.
    Causal Explanation
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