Title
A Peculiarity in Pearl's Logic of Interventionist Counterfactuals.
Abstract
We examine a formal semantics for counterfactual conditionals due to Judea Pearl, which formalizes the interventionist interpretation of counterfactuals central to the interventionist accounts of causation and explanation. We show that a characteristic principle validated by Pearl’s semantics, known as the principle of reversibility, states a kind of irreversibility: counterfactual dependence (in David Lewis’s sense) between two distinct events is irreversible. Moreover, we show that Pearl’s semantics rules out only mutual counterfactual dependence, not cyclic dependence in general. This, we argue, suggests that Pearl’s logic is either too weak or too strong.
Year
DOI
Venue
2013
10.1007/s10992-012-9249-z
J. Philosophical Logic
Keywords
Field
DocType
humanidades,causal model,interventionism
Causation,Counterfactual thinking,Counterfactual conditional,Epistemology,Interventionism (politics),Semantics,Mathematics,Semantics of logic,Causal model
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
42
5
1573-0433
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.36
2
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jiji Zhang114917.52
Wai-Yin Lam210.36
Rafael De Clercq331.44