Historical Counterfactuals, Transition Periods, and the Constraints on Imagination

Catherine Greene
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Abstract

The history of how philosophers have dealt with thought experiments in science is the main focus of this special issue. Counterfactual analysis is an interesting feature of thought experiments, because it requires the imagination of alternative states of the world (see also publications by Fearon, Lebow and Stein, Reiss, and Tetlock and Belkin, who suggest the same). In historical analysis, the use of imagination is often the focus of criticisms of such counterfactual analysis. In this article, I consider three strategies for constraining imagination: making limited counterfactual changes, limiting counterfactual changes to decisions of important figures, and using evidence to restrict the scope for imagination. Given the focus of this special issue, I will relate this discussion to Lewis’s and Woodward’s analyses of counterfactuals in the philosophy of science. I show that counterfactual analysis in historical cases has some resemblance to Lewis’s and Woodward’s analyses, but that what Lewis calls “transition periods” cannot be left entirely vague, as Lewis suggests, nor can counterfactual changes be seen simply as interventions, as Woodward suggests. I propose that efforts to limit imagination in historical counterfactuals are ultimately problematic, but that imagination can nevertheless play a useful role in counterfactual analysis.
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历史的反事实、过渡时期和想象力的限制
哲学家如何处理科学中的思想实验的历史是本期特刊的主要焦点。反事实分析是思想实验的一个有趣特征,因为它需要对世界的其他状态的想象(参见费伦、勒博和斯坦、赖斯、泰特洛克和贝尔金的出版物,他们也提出了同样的观点)。在历史分析中,想象力的使用往往是批评这种反事实分析的焦点。在这篇文章中,我考虑了三种限制想象力的策略:做出有限的反事实改变,限制重要人物决定的反事实改变,以及使用证据限制想象力的范围。鉴于这期特刊的重点,我将把这一讨论与刘易斯和伍德沃德对科学哲学中反事实的分析联系起来。我表明,历史案例中的反事实分析与刘易斯和伍德沃德的分析有一些相似之处,但刘易斯所说的“过渡期”不能像刘易斯所说的那样完全模糊,也不能像伍德沃德所说的那样,将反事实的变化简单地视为干预。我认为,在历史反事实中限制想象力的努力最终是有问题的,但想象力仍然可以在反事实分析中发挥有用的作用。
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25
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