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  1. Sets, Net Effects, Causal Mechanisms, Subpopulations, and Understanding: A Comment on Mahoney.Stephen Turner - 2023 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 53 (5):424-438.
    This comment discusses the suggestions made in Mahoney’s “Constructivist Set-Theoretic Analysis: An Alternative to Essentialist Social Science” (2023). Mahoney presents an approach to cases of intersectionality or confounding which produce causal results unlike those that result from traditional net effects causal modeling. He presents it as an alternative to “essentialism,” which he describes as a cognitive error. These alternatives have the same problems as those he attributes to net effects analysis, with one exception: the method does allow for the identification (...)
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  • Causal vs. Conceptual Heterogeneity: Reply to Turner.James Mahoney - 2023 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 53 (5):439-446.
    Professor Turner’s reply to my article focuses on the ways in which set-theoretic analysis can be used to help solve problems of causal heterogeneity in social science research. By contrast, I discuss the ways in which set-theoretic analysis can be used to help solve problems of conceptual heterogeneity. I identify conceptual heterogeneity as a ubiquitous problem that is disguised by psychological essentialism. The seriousness of this problem must be recognized for scholars to appreciate the advantages of constructivist set-theoretic analysis for (...)
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