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Cited by 587 publications
(321 citation statements)
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“…Example 5.6: Consider an example originally due to McDermott [1995], and also considered by Collins [2000], Lewis [2000], and Hitchcock [2001]. A ball is caught by a fielder.…”
Section: Example 52mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Example 5.6: Consider an example originally due to McDermott [1995], and also considered by Collins [2000], Lewis [2000], and Hitchcock [2001]. A ball is caught by a fielder.…”
Section: Example 52mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Heckerman and Shachter [1995] have a similar minimality requirement; Lewis [2000] mentions the need for minimality as well. Interestingly, in all the examples we have considered, AC3 forces the cause to be a single conjunct of the form X = x.…”
Section: The Definition Of Causementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Hall [2000] is even more insistent, saying "That causation is, necessarily, a transitive relation on events seems to many a bedrock datum, one of the few indisputable a priori insights we have into the workings of the concept." Lewis [1986Lewis [ , 2000 imposes transitivity in his influential definition of causality, by taking causality to be the transitive closure ("ancestral", in his terminology) of a one-step causal dependence relation. (Halpern 2016b: 2) Although Halpern (2016b) agrees that transitivity should be preserved as much as possible, he acknowledges that there are convincing counterexamples, as do all of the other authors mentioned.…”
Section: Literature Surveymentioning
confidence: 99%