Accepted Papers
- Sudeepa ABEYSINGHE and Justin PARKHURST, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
The Use of Evidence in Health Policy: the Practical Implications of Getting Research into Practice
- Michael BAUMGARTNER, University of Osnabrück
Is It Possible to Experimentally Reveal non-reductive Mental Causation?
- Lorenzo CASINI, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy
Interventions, Simulation, and Causal Inference
- Esteban CÉSPEDES, J.W. Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main
Is Overdetermination a Possible Experiment?
- Inge DE BAL, Bert LEURIDAN and Erik WEBER, Ghent University
Interventionism, Policy and Varieties of Evidence for Causal Claims
- Matthias EGG, University of Lausanne
Non-local Causality in EPR-type Experiments
- Matt FARR, University of Sydney
Causation and Initial Conditions in Time-Reversal Symmetric Physics
- Mark FEDYK, Mount Allison University
There is More Causal Knowledge in the Ethical Domain than can be Experimentally Investigated
- Alexander GEBHARTER, University of Düsseldorf
Old and New Problems for Woodward’s Interventionist Theory of Causation
- Victor GIJSBERS, Leiden University and Leon DE BRUIN, Radboud University Nijmegen and Bochum University
An Agency-Interventionist Account of Causation
- Tobias HENSCHEN, University of Heidelberg
Some Problems of Causal Inference from Non-experimental Data in Macroeconometrics
- Dieneke HUBBELING, South West London and St George’s NHS Mental Health Trust, London
Finding Out About Causal Influences in Different Ways
- Dylan HUTCHISON and Samantha KLEINBERG, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken
Causal Inference under Uncertainty via adjustments and SOPDs
- Phyllis ILLARI, University College London and Federica RUSSO, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Information and Biomarkers of Disease
- Maria JIMENEZ BUEDO, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia
Internal and External Validity: Implicit Assumptions about Causal Inference from Experiments
- Maria KRONFELDNER, University of Bielefeld
Norms of Reactions and Causal Explanation: The Tenacity of the 'Genes for' Approach and Two Kinds of Reconstituting the Phenomena
- Jaakko KUORIKOSKI and Caterina MARCHIONNI, University of Helsinki
Neuroeconomics as Triangulation
- Alexandre MARCELLESI, University of California, San Diego
Interventionism: Don’t Believe the Hype!
- Marcus MISSAL, Université Catholique de Louvain
Causality and Prediction in the Oculomotor System
- Alexander PRESCOTT-COUCH, Harvard University
Two Problems for Interventionism
- Julian REISS, Durham University
A Theory of Evidence for Causal Claims
- Alexander REUTLINGER, University of Cologne
Interventions, Counterfactuals and the Open-systems Argument
- Russo.odt
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