4.0 Article

DIFFERENCE-MAKING CONDITIONALS AND THE RELEVANT RAMSEY TEST

Journal

REVIEW OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages 133-164

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1755020319000674

Keywords

conditionals; relevance; dependence; Ramsey Test; belief revision

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This article explores conditionals that express the impact of the antecedent on the consequent, presenting the 'relevantised' version of the Ramsey Test and the 'Dependent Ramsey Test.' These conditionals violate traditional principles of conditional logic, but offer an intriguing logic of their own, closely related to David Lewis's counterfactual analysis of causation.
This article explores conditionals expressing that the antecedent makes a difference for the consequent. A 'relevantised' version of the Ramsey Test for conditionals is employed in the context of the classical theory of belief revision. The idea of this test is that the antecedent is relevant to the consequent in the following sense: a conditional is accepted just in case (i) the consequent is accepted if the belief state is revised by the antecedent and (ii) the consequent fails to be accepted if the belief state is revised by the antecedent's negation. The connective thus defined violates almost all of the traditional principles of conditional logic, but it obeys an interesting logic of its own. The article also gives the logic of an alternative version, the 'Dependent Ramsey Test,' according to which a conditional is accepted just in case (i) the consequent is accepted if the belief state is revised by the antecedent and (ii) the consequent is rejected (e.g., its negation is accepted) if the belief state is revised by the antecedent's negation. This conditional is closely related to David Lewis's counterfactual analysis of causation.

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