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Indicative and counterfactual ‘only if’ conditionals
Authors:Suzanne M Egan  Juan A García-Madruga
Institution:a Department of Psychology, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick, South Circular Road, Limerick, Ireland
b Department of Psychology, UNED, Juan del Rosal, No. 10, Ciudad Universitaria, Madrid 28040, Spain
c Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin, Ireland
Abstract:We report three experiments to test the possibilities reasoners think about when they understand a conditional of the form ‘A only if B’ compared to ‘if A then B’. The experiments examine conditionals in the indicative mood (e.g., A occurred only if B occurred) and counterfactuals in the subjunctive mood (A would have occurred only if B had occurred). The first experiment examines the conjunctions of events that reasoners judge to be consistent with conditionals, e.g., A and B, not-A and not-B. It shows that people think about one possibility to understand ‘if’ and two possibilities to understand ‘only if’; they think about two possibilities to understand counterfactual ‘if’ and ‘only if’. The second experiment shows that the possibilities people think about when they understand ‘only if’ are in a different temporal order (e.g., B and A) to the possibilities they think about for ‘if’ (A and B). The third experiment shows that people make different inferences from ‘only if’ and ‘if’ conditionals and counterfactuals. The implications of the results for theories of counterfactual conditionals are considered.
Keywords:2340
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