Publication | Closed Access
Wishful Intelligibility, Black Boxes, and Epidemiological Explanation
17
Citations
26
References
2021
Year
Wishful IntelligibilityResearch EthicsCausal InferencePsychologySocial SciencesBiasBlack Box ExplanationPublic HealthEpidemiological PrinciplePlausible ReasoningCognitive ScienceEpidemiological OutcomeCausal ReasoningEpidemiologyReasoningTime-varying ConfoundingCausalityExplainable AiRisk DecisionsBlack Boxes
Epidemiological explanation often has a “black box” character, meaning the intermediate steps between cause and effect are unknown. Filling in black boxes is thought to improve causal inferences by making them intelligible. I argue that adding information about intermediate causes to a black box explanation is an unreliable guide to pragmatic intelligibility because it may mislead us about the stability of a cause. I diagnose a problem that I call wishful intelligibility, which occurs when scientists misjudge the limitations of certain features of an explanation. Wishful intelligibility gives us a new reason to prefer black box explanations in some contexts.
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