Carnegie Mellon University
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Demoralizing causation

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posted on 2013-12-01, 00:00 authored by David DanksDavid Danks, David Rose, Edouard Machery

There have recently been a number of strong claims that normative considerations, broadly construed, influence many philosophically important folk concepts and perhaps are even a constitutive component of various cognitive processes. Many such claims have been made about the influence of such factors on our folk notion of causation. In this paper, we argue that the strong claims found in the recent literature on causal cognition are overstated, as they are based on one narrow type of data about a particular type of causal cognition; the extant data do not warrant any wide-ranging conclusions about the pervasiveness of normative considerations in causal cognition. Of course, almost all empirical investigations involve some manner of ampliative inference, and so we provide novel empirical results demonstrating that there are types of causal cognition that do not seem to be influenced by moral considerations.

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Publisher Statement

The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11098-013-0266-8

Date

2013-12-01

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