Causal reductionism and causal structures
- PMID: 34556868
- DOI: 10.1038/s41593-021-00911-8
Causal reductionism and causal structures
Abstract
Causal reductionism is the widespread assumption that there is no room for additional causes once we have accounted for all elementary mechanisms within a system. Due to its intuitive appeal, causal reductionism is prevalent in neuroscience: once all neurons have been caused to fire or not to fire, it seems that causally there is nothing left to be accounted for. Here, we argue that these reductionist intuitions are based on an implicit, unexamined notion of causation that conflates causation with prediction. By means of a simple model organism, we demonstrate that causal reductionism cannot provide a complete and coherent account of 'what caused what'. To that end, we outline an explicit, operational approach to analyzing causal structures.
© 2021. Springer Nature America, Inc.
References
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- Marr, D. Vision: a Computational Investigation into the Human Representation and Processing of Visual Information (MIT Press, 1982).
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- Kim, J. Mind in a Physical World: an Essay on the Mind–Body Problem and Mental Causation (MIT press, 1998). Classical philosophical work introducing the causal exclusion argument and employing it in the context of reductive physicalism.
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- Crick, F. The Astonishing Hypothesis (Scribner’s, New York, 1994). An explicit endorsement of causal reductionism in the neuroscience literature. Strictly speaking, Crick was making an ontological statement in addition to a causal statement.
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