Counterfactual promises and threats
Citation
Suzanne M. Egan and Ruth M.J. Burke. “Counterfactual Promises and Threats.” Annual Cognitive Science Conference, Vancouver, B.C., Canada. July 2006. (Refereed).
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Date
2004Author
Egan, Suzanne M.
Byrne, Ruth M.J.
Peer Reviewed
YesMetadata
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Suzanne M. Egan and Ruth M.J. Burke. “Counterfactual Promises and Threats.” Annual Cognitive Science Conference, Vancouver, B.C., Canada. July 2006. (Refereed).
Abstract
We examine counterfactual conditionals about promises, such as ‘if you had tidied your room then I would have given you
ice-cream’ and threats such as ‘if you had hit your sister then I would have grounded you’. Reasoners tend to understand
counterfactual conditionals of the form, ‘if A had been then B would have been’ by thinking about the conjectured
possibility, ‘A and B', and also the presupposed facts ‘not-A and not-B’. We report the results of an experiment that
indicates reasoners may understand counterfactual inducements somewhat differently by thinking about just the
presupposed facts: not-A and not-B. We discuss the implications of the results for accounts of the mental representations of promises and threats.
Keywords
CounterfactualPromises
Threats