No Causes in, No Causes out

In Nature's capacities and their measurement. New York: Oxford University Press (1989)
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Abstract

This chapter argues that one cannot get knowledge of causes from equations and associations alone, using critical analyses of theoretical examples in physics and of attempts in the philosophy of science and economics to reduce causal claims to probabilities. Old causal knowledge must be supplied for new causal knowledge to be had. Analysis of experimental methods and actual experiments show how this can be done.

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