Counterfactual scepticism and antecedent-contextualism
Abstract
I have argued for a kind of 'counterfactual scepticism': most counterfactuals ever uttered or thought in
human history are false. I briefly rehearse my main arguments. Yet common sense recoils. Ordinary
speakers judge most counterfactuals that they utter and think to be true. A common defence of such
judgments regards counterfactuals as context-dependent: the proposition expressed by a given
counterfactual can vary according to the context in which it is uttered. In normal contexts, the
counterfactuals that we utter are typically true, the defence insists, while granting that there may be more
rarefied contexts in which they are false. I give a taxonomy of such contextualist replies. One could be a
contextualist about the counterfactual connective, about its antecedent, or about its consequent. I offer
some general concerns about all these varieties of contextualism. I then focus especially on antecedentcontextualism,
as I call it. I firstly raise some high-level objections to it. Then, I look at such a contextualist
account due to Sandgren and Steele. I think it has many virtues, but also some problems. I conclude with
some avenues for future research
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2037-12-31