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(2017) Synthese 194 (12).

Counterlegal dependence and causation's arrows

causal models for backtrackers and counterlegals

Tyrus Fisher

pp. 4983-5003

A counterlegal is a counterfactual conditional containing an antecedent that is inconsistent with some set of laws. A backtracker is a counterfactual that tells us how things would be at a time earlier than that of its antecedent, were the antecedent to obtain. Typically, theories that evaluate counterlegals appropriately don’t evaluate backtrackers properly, and vice versa. Two cases in point: Lewis’ (Noûs 13:455–476, 1979a) ordering semantics handles counterlegals well but not backtrackers. Hiddleston’s (Noûs 39(4):632–657, 2005) causal-model semantics nicely handles backtrackers but not counterlegals. Taking Hiddleston’s account as a starting point, I offer steps toward a theory capable of handling both counterlegals and backtrackers. The core contribution of this paper is a means for evaluating counterlegals relative to minimally-illegal models.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-016-1189-7

Full citation:

Fisher, T. (2017). Counterlegal dependence and causation's arrows: causal models for backtrackers and counterlegals. Synthese 194 (12), pp. 4983-5003.

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