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The probability of causal conditionals
Authors:Over David E  Hadjichristidis Constantinos  Evans Jonathan St B T  Handley Simon J  Sloman Steven A
Affiliation:Psychology Department, University of Sunderland, Sunderland SR6 0DD, UK. david.over@sunderland.ac.uk
Abstract:Conditionals in natural language are central to reasoning and decision making. A theoretical proposal called the Ramsey test implies the conditional probability hypothesis: that the subjective probability of a natural language conditional, P(if p then q), is the conditional subjective probability, P(q/p). We report three experiments on causal indicative conditionals and related counterfactuals that support this hypothesis. We measured the probabilities people assigned to truth table cases, P(pq), P(p notq), P( notpq) and P( notp notq). From these ratings, we computed three independent predictors, P(p), P(q/p) and P(q/ notp), that we then entered into a regression equation with judged P(if p then q) as the dependent variable. In line with the conditional probability hypothesis, P(q/p) was by far the strongest predictor in our experiments. This result is inconsistent with the claim that causal conditionals are the material conditionals of elementary logic. Instead, it supports the Ramsey test hypothesis, implying that common processes underlie the use of conditionals in reasoning and judgments of conditional probability in decision making.
Keywords:Causal conditionals   Counterfactuals   Conditional probability   Ramsey test   Covariation   Causation   Delta-p rule
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