James Woodward is Distinguished Professor in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh, and the J.O. and Juliette Koepfli Professor Emeritus at the California Institute of Technology. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and served as President of the Philosophy of Science Association from 2010-2012.
For anyone who is interested in how we humans come to understand the causal world as we do, Woodward's astonishingly broad and deep assessment of both the philosophy and cognition literatures will offer a rewarding read. This book will arm you with insights and findings that may completely change how you think about causation and the mind's role in an 'objective' understanding of it. -- Patricia Cheng, Department of Psychology, UCLA James Woodward's new book is a compelling synthesis of what is known about human causal judgement, its purposes, and how the norms of causal reasoning serve those ends. Invoking only a minimalist metaphysics of interventions, Woodward weaves many threads into a convincing whole. The book should be a touchstone for those in philosophy, psychology and computer science who think about causality. -- Clark Glymour James Woodward revolutionized the philosophical discussion of causation. In his new book he elucidates the deep relationships between the psychology of causal understanding and philosophical questions. The book is lucid, thoughtful, knowledgeable and careful and at the same time brimming over with remarkable new ideas and insights - a must read for both philosophers and cognitive scientists. -- Alison Gopnik, Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley James Woodward's 2003 book Making Things Happen about causal explanation was arguably the most important philosophical book about causation to appear in decades. This eagerly awaited new book is an expansive study of causation and causal reasoning that challenges received ideas about the relationship between theoretical and normative, between science and philosophy, and between metaphysics and psychology. Enormous in scopeDLspanning philosophy, psychology, statistics and machine learningDLit will set the agenda for discussions of causation for years to come. -- Jenann Ismael, Department of Philosophy, Columbia University