Double Prevention, Causal Judgments, and Counterfactuals.
Abstract
Mike accidentally knocked against a bottle. Seeing that the bottle was about to fall,
Jack was just about to catch it when Peter accidentally knocked against him, making
Jack unable to catch it. Jack did not grab the bottle, and it fell to the ground and
spilled. In double-prevention cases like these, philosophers and nonphilosophers alike
tend to judge that Mike knocking into the bottle caused the beer to spill and that
Peter knocking into Jack did not cause the beer to spill. This difference in causal
judgment is a difficult puzzle for counterfactual theories of causal judgment; if
each event had not happened, the outcome would not have, yet there is a difference
in people's causal judgments. In four experiments and three supplemental experiments,
we confirm this difference in causal judgments. We also show that differences in people's
counterfactual thinking can explain this difference in their causal judgments and
that recent counterfactual models of causal judgment can account for these patterns.
We discuss these results in relation to work on counterfactual thinking and causal
modeling.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25389Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1111/cogs.13127Publication Info
Henne, Paul; & O'Neill, Kevin (2022). Double Prevention, Causal Judgments, and Counterfactuals. Cognitive science, 46(5). pp. e13127. 10.1111/cogs.13127. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25389.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Kevin O'Neill
Student
Kevin O'Neill is a PhD Candidate in Psychology & Neuroscience working with Dr. Felipe
De Brigard and Dr. John Pearson to study the computations underlying causal judgment,
metacognition, and memory.

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