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NMR
2004
Springer

The structural model interpretation of the NESS test

13 years 10 months ago
The structural model interpretation of the NESS test
Within the law, the traditional test for attributing causal responsibility is the counterfactual “but-for” test, which asks whether the injury complained of would have occurred but for the defendant’s wrongful act. This definition generally conforms to common intuitions regarding causation, but gives non-intuitive results in situations of overdetermination with two or more potential causes present. To handle such situations, Wright defined the NESS Test of causal contribution, described as a formalization of the concept underlying common intuitions of causal attribution. Halpern and Pearl provide a definition of actual causality in the mathematical language of structural models that yields counterintuitive results in certain scenarios. We present a new definition that appears to correct those problems and explain its greater conformity with the intuitions underlying the NESS test.
Richard A. Baldwin, Eric Neufeld
Added 02 Jul 2010
Updated 02 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where NMR
Authors Richard A. Baldwin, Eric Neufeld
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