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Introduction: Causation and its Asymmetries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 April 2010

Daniel M. Hausman
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin, Madison
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Summary

Causation apparently has several different asymmetrical features. In this book I shall say what these features are and how they are related to one another. Here is a list of many of these purported asymmetries:

Time order. Effects do not come before their causes (chapter 3).

Probabilistic Independence: Causes of a given effect are probabilistically independent of one another, while effects of a given cause are probabilistically dependent on one another (chapters 4, 12).

Agency or manipulability: Causes can be used to manipulate their effects, but effects cannot be used to manipulate their causes, and effects of a common cause cannot be used to manipulate one another (chapters 5, 7).

Counter/actual dependence: Effects counterfactually depend on their causes, while causes do not counterfactually depend on their effects and effects of a common cause do not counterfactually depend on one another (chapters 6, 7).

Over determination: Effects overdetermine their causes, while causes rarely overdetermine their effects (chapter 6).

Explanation: Causes can be cited to explain their effects, but effects cannot be cited to explain their causes and effects of a common cause cannot be cited to explain one another (chapter 8).

Invariance: If the dependent variables in an equation system are effects of the independent variables, then if one intervenes and changes the value of an independent variable and substitutes the new value in the equations, one has the best prediction of new values for the dependent variables. If on the other hand the independent variables causally depend on the dependent variables and one substitutes new values for the independent variables, then the values one calculates for the dependent variables will be incorrect (chapters 8, 11). […]

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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