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The Nature of Shadows, from Yale to Bilkent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2010

István Aranyosi*
Affiliation:
Bilkent University, Turkey

Abstract

I discuss a solution to the Yale shadow puzzle, due to Roy Sorensen, based on the actual process theory of causation, and argue that it does not work in the case of a new version of the puzzle, which I call ‘the Bilkent shadow puzzle’. I offer a picture of the ontology of shadows which, together with an alternative view of causation, constitutes the basis for a new solution that uniformly solves both puzzles.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 2010

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References

1 Named so because it used to be a common lunchtime discussion topic among Yale University philosophers in the 1970s. Its first mention and discussion in print, to my knowledge, is in Todes, S. and Daniels, C., ‘Beyond the doubt of a shadow: a phenomenological and linguistic analysis of shadows’, Selected Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy 5 (1975), 203216Google Scholar. It has subsequently been discussed by Van Fraassen, Bas in Laws and Symmetry (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989, 217–9)CrossRefGoogle Scholar and by Sorensen, Roy in Seeing Dark Things. The Philosophy of Shadows (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008, 5254 and 98–99)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

2 Op. cit. note 1, 53.

3 Lewis, D., ‘Causation’, Journal of Philosophy 70 (1973), 556–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4 There is a six hour time zone difference between Yale and Bilkent.

5 Aranyosi, I., ‘Shadows of constitution’, Monist 90 (2007), 415431CrossRefGoogle Scholar (quote from 417–8).

6 In Aranyosi, I., ‘Review of Roy Sorensen, Seeing Dark Things. The Philosophy of Shadows (Oxford University Press, 2008)’, Australasian Journal of Philosophy 86 (2008), 513515Google Scholar (on page 514), and in Aranyosi, I., ‘The reappearing act’, Acta Analytica 24 (2009), 110CrossRefGoogle Scholar (on page 7).

7 Lewis, David, ‘Causation as influence’, Journal of Philosophy 97 (2000), 182–97CrossRefGoogle Scholar (on 188–190).

8 For discussion about the puzzles I would like to thank Ezgi Ulusoy Aranyosi. I would also like to dedicate this paper to the memory of Ihsan Doǧramaci, founder and chairman of the Board of Trustees of Bilkent University.