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7 - Reichenbachian common cause systems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2013

Gábor Hofer-Szabó
Affiliation:
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Miklós Rédei
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science
László E. Szabó
Affiliation:
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
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Summary

Common cause partitions

Confronted with a common cause incomplete probability space (X, S, p)in which a direct causal influence between the correlated events is excluded, one can have in principle two strategies aiming at saving the Common Cause Principle: one may try to argue that S is not “rich enough” to contain a common cause, but there might exist a larger probability space (X′, S′, p′) that already contains a common cause of the correlation. As we have seen in Chapter 3 this strategy always works in the sense that it is always possible to enlarge (X, S, p) in such a way that the enlarged probability space already contains an event C that satisfies the Reichenbachian conditions.

Another natural idea is to suspect that the correlation between A and B is not due to a single factor but may be the cumulative result of a (possibly large) number of different “partial common causes,” none of which can in and by itself yield a complete common-cause-type explanation of the correlation, all of which, taken together, can however account for the entire correlation. In this chapter we elaborate this idea by formulating precisely a notion of the Reichenbachian Common Cause System (RCCS) and prove propositions on the existence and features of such systems.

As we have seen in Chapter 2, if the events A, B, C satisfy the Reichenbachian conditions (2.5)–(2.8) then there is a positive correlation between A and B (Proposition 2.5).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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