Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Dispositions and Interferences: the Paper

As some of you may recall, a while ago I had a couple of posts in which I sketched a Qualified Counterfactual Analysis of disposition ascriptions. Well, after a few changes of mind, a very long gestation period and an equally long review process, I am pleased to announce that the paper that descended from those posts has been accepted for publication in Philosophical Studies (and can be downloaded here). I very much hope that the paper will contribute to debunking the myth that ceteris paribus clauses cannot be spelled out in a clear and non-circular manner.
Thanks again to all of you who commented on my original posts and, if you have any last-minute comments and suggestions, please do let me know as I haven't submitted the final version yet.

2 comments:

  1. Great paper. One question, though:

    Suppose we want to test an object O to see if it possesses the disposition D - contrafactually(if S, then M). We also want to test A1 and check if this is an antidote to D.

    Test #1: We put O under S & A1. O doesn't manifest M.
    Test #2: We put O under S & ~A1. O doesn't manifest M either.

    In this case I would feel compelled to say O isn't disposed to manifest M if subject to S in the absence of A1 - which is the same as saying that A1 isn't an antidote to D. But that would be too easy. Maybe O didn't manifest M because there was another hidden antidote in the active: A2. So we could set up test #3:

    Test #3: O is subject to S & ~A1 & ~A2. O doesn't manifest M.

    So what conclusion can we draw at this point? Either A1 and A2 are antidotes to D and there is still another antidote A3 on the active, or they're not antidotes to D and O just isn't disposed to M when S. But how can we distinguish those two alternatives unless we already know the whole extension of the set of every antidote-to-D?

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    1. Thanks, Matthews V! My first reaction would be to say that the issue you raise is an epistemological one (and an interesting one) but analyses of disposition ascriptions are trying to answer a semantical/metaphysical question. In any case, it seems that trying to determine whether something is an antidote to D, we have to determine if o has D in the first place and we might never be able to find out if D is necessarily (or at least always) interfered with. That doesn't mean, however, that there is no fact of the matter as to whether o has D (see the section of the paper on necessary interferences).

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