2021
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/db6ms
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Changing Minds ― Epistemic Interventions in Causal Reasoning

Abstract: Did Tom’s use of nuts in the dish cause Billy’s allergic reaction? According to counterfactual theories of causation, an agent is judged a cause to the extent that their action made a difference to the outcome (Gerstenberg, Goodman, Lagnado, & Tenenbaum, 2020; Gerstenberg, Halpern, & Tenenbaum, 2015; Halpern, 2016; Hitchcock & Knobe, 2009). In this paper, we argue for the integration of epistemic states into current counterfactual accounts of causation. In the case of ignorant causal ag… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Perceived agency has previously been found to influence people's causal judgments (see e.g., Kirfel & Lagnado, 2021b;Lombrozo, 2010;Rose, 2017;Schwenkler & Sytsma, 2020), suggesting that reasoning about how much agency was involved is part of how people understand what qualifies as cause of a given outcome. Yet here we find that this phenomenon-the effect of perceived agency-may actually be far more general than causal cognition.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Perceived agency has previously been found to influence people's causal judgments (see e.g., Kirfel & Lagnado, 2021b;Lombrozo, 2010;Rose, 2017;Schwenkler & Sytsma, 2020), suggesting that reasoning about how much agency was involved is part of how people understand what qualifies as cause of a given outcome. Yet here we find that this phenomenon-the effect of perceived agency-may actually be far more general than causal cognition.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The extent to which people think that Tom (or any animate agent) caused a particular outcome depends in part on whether or not Tom was exercising his own agency in the way that he affected the outcome (see e.g., Kirfel & Lagnado, 2021a, 2021bLagnado & Channon, 2008;Lombrozo, 2010;Rose, 2017;Schwenkler & Sytsma, 2020). Here, it seems straightforward to say that "Tom caused train delay" only if Tom was acting intentionally when he ended up being involved in the train delay.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The vignette leaves open whether there was an opportunity for the captain to learn about the secret passengers in the cargo compartment. This has likely led to assumptions about the general immutability of the agent's ignorance in a number of scenarios (Kirfel & Lagnado, 2021b), and subsequently affected people's counterfactual reasoning about epistemic states.…”
Section: Discussion Part IImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One challenge for these theories, however, is to explain how and why these epistemic states play the correct role in shaping counterfactual reasoning. Some progress on this has been made in the domain of causal judgments (Kirfel & Lagnado, 2021b;Kominsky & Phillips, 2019). Kominsky and Phillips (2019) argue that the epistemic state of a norm-violating agent modulates the perceived abnormality of their action.…”
Section: Counterfactualsmentioning
confidence: 99%