Causation: A User’s Guide

Oxford: Oxford University Press UK. Edited by Edward J. Hall (2013)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Causation is at once familiar and mysterious. Neither common sense nor extensive philosophical debate has led us to anything like agreement on the correct analysis of the concept of causation, or an account of the metaphysical nature of the causal relation. Causation: A User's Guide cuts a clear path through this confusing but vital landscape. L. A. Paul and Ned Hall guide the reader through the most important philosophical treatments of causation, negotiating the terrain by taking a set of examples as landmarks. They clarify the central themes of the debate about causation, and cover questions about causation involving omissions or absences, preemption and other species of redundant causation, and the possibility that causation is not transitive. Along the way, Paul and Hall examine several contemporary proposals for analyzing the nature of causation and assess their merits and overall methodological cogency.The book is designed to be of value both to trained specialists and those coming to the problem of causation for the first time. It provides the reader with a broad and sophisticated view of the metaphysics of the causal relation.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,386

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Chapters

The scope and aims of this “guide”

Though causation is a deeply familiar relation, it has resisted our best attempts to analyze it. In spite of our difficulties in coming up with a satisfactory conceptual analysis or reductive account, philosophical accounts of causation have yielded a wealth of insights, many of which are ... see more

Causation involving omissions

This chapter focuses on examples that, in one way or another, involve omissions, that is, failures of events to occur. We discuss the metaphysical status of omissions, show how omission involving causation exhibits striking dissimilarities from ordinary causation, and look closely at struc... see more

Similar books and articles

How causal is downward causation?Menno Hulswit - 2005 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 36 (2):261 - 287.
Causation and conditionals.Ernest Sosa (ed.) - 1975 - New York: Oxford University Press.
Absence Causation and a Liberal Theory of Causal Explanation.Zhiheng Tang - 2015 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 93 (4):688-705.
Grounding in the image of causation.Jonathan Schaffer - 2016 - Philosophical Studies 173 (1):49-100.
Metaphysics and mental causation.Lynne Rudder Baker - 1993 - In John Heil & Alfred R. Mele (eds.), Mental Causation. Oxford University Press. pp. 75-96.
Cause and Norm.Christopher Hitchcock & Joshua Knobe - 2009 - Journal of Philosophy 106 (11):587-612.

Analytics

Added to PP
2013-06-26

Downloads
107 (#161,052)

6 months
31 (#102,636)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile

Ned Hall
Harvard University

Citations of this work

Grounding in the image of causation.Jonathan Schaffer - 2016 - Philosophical Studies 173 (1):49-100.
Metaphysics as modeling: the handmaiden’s tale.L. A. Paul - 2012 - Philosophical Studies 160 (1):1-29.
A Model-Invariant Theory of Causation.J. Dmitri Gallow - 2021 - Philosophical Review 130 (1):45-96.
A One Category Ontology.L. A. Paul - 2017 - In John A. Keller (ed.), Being, Freedom, and Method: Themes From the Philosophy of Peter van Inwagen. New York: Oxford University Press UK. pp. 32-62.
The problem of variable choice.James Woodward - 2016 - Synthese 193 (4):1047-1072.

View all 97 citations / Add more citations

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references