Open-Ended Control vs. Closed-Ended Control: Limits of Mechanistic Explanation

Abstract

Some recent discussions of mechanistic explanation have focused on control operations. But control is often associated with teleological or normative-sounding concepts like goals and set-points, prompting the question: Does an explanation that refers to parts or mechanisms “controlling” each other thereby fail to be mechanistic? In this paper I introduce and explain a distinction between what I call open-ended and closed-ended control operations. I then argue that explanations that enlist control operations to do explanatory work can count as mechanistic only if such control operations are closed-ended, not open-ended.

Author's Profile

Jason Winning
University of Toronto, St. George Campus

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2022-06-25

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