
Contents
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1 Joint effects 1 Joint effects
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2 Early preemption 2 Early preemption
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2.1 Appealing to the transitivity of causation 2.1 Appealing to the transitivity of causation
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2.2 The “gap” strategy 2.2 The “gap” strategy
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2.3 De facto dependence 2.3 De facto dependence
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2.3.1 The two components of de facto dependence 2.3.1 The two components of de facto dependence
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2.3.2 Hitchcock 2.3.2 Hitchcock
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2.3.3 Yablo 2.3.3 Yablo
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2.4 Minimal sufficiency 2.4 Minimal sufficiency
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2.5 Summary 2.5 Summary
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3 Tampering 3 Tampering
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3.1 The structure of the case 3.1 The structure of the case
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3.2 The “gap” strategy reconsidered 3.2 The “gap” strategy reconsidered
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3.3 Tampering’s other lessons 3.3 Tampering’s other lessons
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4 Late preemption 4 Late preemption
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4.1 Late preemption and “missing events” 4.1 Late preemption and “missing events”
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4.2 “Sensitivity” strategies 4.2 “Sensitivity” strategies
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4.2.1 Modally “fragile” events 4.2.1 Modally “fragile” events
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4.2.2 Alterations 4.2.2 Alterations
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4.2.3 Failure of the sensitivity strategy: the hardest cases of late preemption 4.2.3 Failure of the sensitivity strategy: the hardest cases of late preemption
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4.2.4 Quasi-Newtonian laws 4.2.4 Quasi-Newtonian laws
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4.2.5 De facto dependence once again 4.2.5 De facto dependence once again
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4.2.6 Finding the fact to be held fixed, part 1 4.2.6 Finding the fact to be held fixed, part 1
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4.2.7 Finding the fact to be held fixed, part 2 4.2.7 Finding the fact to be held fixed, part 2
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4.2.8 Evaluating the counterfactual, part 1 4.2.8 Evaluating the counterfactual, part 1
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4.2.9 Evaluating the counterfactual, part 2 4.2.9 Evaluating the counterfactual, part 2
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4.2.10 De facto dependence and reductionism about causation 4.2.10 De facto dependence and reductionism about causation
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4.3 Causation and intrinsicness 4.3 Causation and intrinsicness
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4.3.1 Statement of the intrinsicness thesis 4.3.1 Statement of the intrinsicness thesis
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4.3.2 The blueprint strategy 4.3.2 The blueprint strategy
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4.3.3 Some challenges 4.3.3 Some challenges
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4.3.4 Virulent late preemption 4.3.4 Virulent late preemption
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5 Overdetermination 5 Overdetermination
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6 Black-box cases 6 Black-box cases
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7 The lessons of redundant causation 7 The lessons of redundant causation
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3 3 Varieties of redundant causation
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Published:April 2013
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Abstract
Problems involving redundant causation have been at the center of the most interesting and vigorous debates over causal analysis. Redundancy highlights how difficult it can be to determine which events are the causes of an effect if we don’t know the underlying causal structure of the case. We discuss a wide range of redundant and related cases, with a special focus on preemption, both early and late, and on David Lewis’s attempts to handle causal preemption within a counterfactual analysis. We also discuss joint causation, symmetric overdetermination, and a range of cases that combine redundancy with other kinds of causal structure. Our aim is to develop the way that attention to certain features of redundancy highlights the ways in which we recognize and distinguish causal relations but also reveals deep tensions between our analyses of and intuitions about causation. We pay special attention to cases of redundant causation such as late preemption, for these structures inexorably constrain the form of any account that hopes to handle them, and thus present the most difficult problems for any reductive approach to the causal relation or any approach that admits black box cases.
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