Explanatory Abstraction and the Goldilocks Problem: Interventionism Gets Things Just Right

British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 71 (2):633-663 (2020)
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Abstract

Theories of explanation need to account for a puzzling feature of our explanatory practices: the fact that we prefer explanations that are relatively abstract but only moderately so. Contra Franklin-Hall ([2016]), I argue that the interventionist account of explanation provides a natural and elegant explanation of this fact. By striking the right balance between specificity and generality, moderately abstract explanations optimally subserve what interventionists regard as the goal of explanation, namely identifying possible interventions that would have changed the explanandum.

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Thomas Blanchard
University of Cologne

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