The Conserved Quantity Theory of Causation and Chance Raising
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 11:49authored byDowe, P
In this paper I offer an 'integrating account' of singular causation, where the term 'integrating' refers to the following program for analysing causation. There are two intuitions about causation, both of which face serious counterexamples when used as the basis for an analysis of causation. The 'process' intuition, which says that causes and effects are linked by concrete processes, runs into trouble with cases of 'misconnections', where an event which serves to prevent another fails to do so on a particular occasion and yet the two events are linked by causal processes. The chance raising intuition, according to which causes raise the chance of their effects, easily accounts for misconnections but faces the problem of chance lowering causes, a problem easily accounted for by the process approach. The integrating program attempts to provide an analysis of singular causation by synthesising the two insights, so as to solve both problems. In this paper I show that extant versions of the integrating program due to Eells, Lewis, and Menzies fail to account for the chance-lowering counterexample. I offer a new diagnosis of the chance lowering case, and use that as a basis for an integrating account of causation which does solve both cases. In doing so, I accept various assumptions of the integrating program, in particular that there are no other problems with these two approaches. As an example of the process account, I focus on the recent CQ theory of Wesley Salmon (1997). Copyright 1999 by the Philosophy of Science Association. All rights reserved.
History
Publication title
Philosophy of Science
Volume
66
Pagination
S486-501
ISSN
0031-8248
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
Univ Chicago Press
Place of publication
1427 E 60Th St, Chicago, USA, Il, 60637-2954
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in philosophy and religious studies