"Causes and Coincidences" by David Owens [Book Review]

British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (1):146-8 (1996)
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Abstract

In this fine book, David Owens presents a new theory of causation based on the idea that the notions of cause and coincidence are intimately related. That there is a link between the concept of cause and the concept of coincidence is not news. As Richard Sorabji has argued, Aristotle thought that coincidences cannot be explained. What is new in Owens's book is the claim that this apparent truism can form the basis of a full-scale analysis of causation.

Author's Profile

Tim Crane
Central European University

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