bookThe MIT Press eBooksJun 25, 2004Closed access

Causation and Counterfactuals

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Abstract

One philosophical approach to causation sees counterfactual dependence as the key to the explanation of causal facts: for example, events c (the cause) and e (the effect) both occur, but had c not occurred, e would not have occurred either. The counterfactual analysis of causation became a focus of philosophical debate after the 1973 publication of the late David Lewis's groundbreaking paper, "Causation," which argues against the previously accepted "regularity" analysis and in favor of what he called the "promising alternative" of the counterfactual analysis. Thirty years after Lewis's paper, this book brings together some of the most important recent work connecting—or, in some cases, disputing the…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Causation
  • Counterfactual thinking
  • Counterfactual conditional
  • Epistemology
  • Transitive relation
  • Context (archaeology)
  • Philosophy
  • History
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