Guest Speaker: Professor Julian Reiss (Durham)
Title: Cause, Causatives, and Theories of Causation
A Department of Politics seminar | |
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Date | 1 May 2015 |
Time | 11:00 |
Place | IAIS Building/LT1 |
Event details
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to draw attention to the difficulties the ubiquity of causatives such as oxidise, transduce, dampen and prolong inscientific language raise for truth-conditional theories of causation which have the form ‘C causes E if and only if…’ or a near variant.
The difficulties are a consequence of three features of the use of causatives in science: they are ineliminable, they represent causal relations and processes of many different metaphysical kinds, and they are polysemous. Reiss argues that no truth-conditional theory of causation can do justice to the use of causatives in scientific language. I then sketch an alternative, inferentialist theory of causation and finally show how it deals with causatives.
Location:
IAIS Building/LT1