Counterfactuals And Possible Worlds

Canadian Journal of Philosophy 4 (December):381-402 (1974)
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Abstract

This article is a selective review of David Lewis's Counterfactuals, a challenging, provocative, absorbingly interesting attempt to analyze statements of the form “If it were the case that P, then it would be the case that Q.” I shall follow Lewis in calling these “counterfactuals,” and shall nearly follow him in abbreviating them to the form P→Q.Chapter 1, which is nearly a third of the whole, gives the analysis and proves that it endows counterfactuals with some properties which they evidently do have. Chapter 2 presents some “alternative formulations” of the analysis—a logical jeu d'esprit which I shall not discuss except for the section about “cotenability.”

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Citations of this work

The nature of laws.Michael Tooley - 1977 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 7 (4):667-98.
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