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Topics in Metaphysics - B

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Leuenberger S.

Course director

Description

Causation is pivotal in philosophy, and tends to be invoked in debates about existence, knowledge, freedom, individuation, responsibility, the direction of time, the mind-body problem, and many more. Moreover, causation is important outside philosophy too, in disciplines such as economics and psychology, and applied fields such as law, medicine, and engineering. What is causation, then? In its first part, this course will provide an introduction to an account of causation that has been particularly influential in philosophy, and serves as a useful point of reference in the discussion of subsequent work: David Lewis’ counterfactual theory. We will sketch Lewis’ neo-Humean metaphysics: how he explains causation in terms of counterfactuals; counterfactuals in terms of laws of nature; and laws of nature in terms of the “mosaic” of fundamental facts. Along the way, we will discuss problem cases for the theory, as well as objections from an anti-Humean perspective, which takes causation and laws of nature to be more metaphysically robust.

In the second part of the course, we will consider a few more recent topics in the study of causation, such as absence causation, normativity, interventionism, and the structural equations framework. The treatment of each issue will have to be relatively brief, but should put students in a position to decide about what they wish to explore in more depth in their essay.

Objectives

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Teaching mode

In presence

Learning methods

Classes will be a mix of lectures (with accompanying notes provided by the instructor), class discussion, and group exercises, and student presentations (student presentations will be formative, not part of the summative assessment).

Those students who wish to do preparatory reading may start with one or more of the two texts listed below (they are both challenging). The first, by Lewis, is a classic which has inspired a large research tradition, and is still a key point of reference. The second, by Gallow, is a recent survey article, drawing a variety of useful distinctions. The third discusses how causation relates to norms.

  • David Lewis, “Causation”, The Journal of Philosophy 70 (1973): 556–567. Reprinted in Lewis’ Philosophical Papers, vol. II.
  • J. Dmitri Gallow, “The metaphysics of causation”, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2022 Edition).

https://plato.stanford.edu/cgi-in/encyclopedia/archinfo.cgi?entry=causation-metaphysics

More readings (by Christopher Hitchcock, Joshua Knobe, and Sarah McGrath, among others) will be made available during the course.

Examination information

This is a 4 ECTS module, to be assessed by an essay of 3000-3500 words.

Education