Linked bibliography for the SEP article "Reichenbach's Common Cause Principle" by Frank Arntzenius |
This is an automatically generated and experimental page
If everything goes well, this page should display the bibliography of the aforementioned article as it appears in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, but with links added to PhilPapers records and Google Scholar for your convenience. Some bibliographies are not going to be represented correctly or fully up to date. In general, bibliographies of recent works are going to be much better linked than bibliographies of primary literature and older works. Entries with PhilPapers records have links on their titles. A green link indicates that the item is available online at least partially.
This experiment has been authorized by the editors of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. The original article and bibliography can be found here.
- Albert, D., 1999, Chance and Time, Boston: Harvard University Press. (Scholar)
- Arntzenius, F., 1993, “The common cause principle”, PSA, 2: 227–237. (Scholar)
- Arntzenius, F., 1997, “Transition chances and causation”, Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 78(2): 149–168. (Scholar)
- Clifton, R., Feldman, D., Halvorson, H., Redhead, M. & Wilce, A., 1998, “Superentangled states”, Physical Review A, 58: 135–145. (Scholar)
- Clifton, R. & Ruetsche, L., 1999, “Changing the subject: Redei on causal dependence and screening off in algebraic quantum field theory”, Philosophy of Science, 66: S156-S169. (Scholar)
- Earman, J., 1995, Bangs, crunches, whimpers and shrieks, Oxford, Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Elby, A., 1992, “Should we explain the EPR correlations causally?”, Philosophy of Science, 59(1): 16–25. (Scholar)
- Forster, M., 1986, “Unification and Scientific Realism revisited”, in PSA, 1: 394–405. (Scholar)
- Glymour, C. & Spirtes, P., 1994, “Selecting variables and getting to the truth”, in D. Stalker (ed.), Grue! The new riddle of induction, La Salle: Open Court, pp. 273–280 . (Scholar)
- Hofer-Szabo, G., 2007, “Separate- versus common -common-cause-type derivations of the Bell inequalities”, Synthese, 163(2): 199–215. (Scholar)
- Hofer-Szabo, G., M. Redei and L.E. Szabo, 1999, “On Reichenbach’s common cause principle, and Reichenbach’s notion of common cause”, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 50(3): 377–399. (Scholar)
- Hofer-Szabo, G., M. Redei and L.E. Szabo, 2002, “Common-causes are not common common-causes”, Philosophy of Science, 69: 623–636. (Scholar)
- Horwich, P., 1987, Asymmetries in Time, Cambridge: MIT Press. (Scholar)
- Papineau, D., 1985, “Causal Asymmetry”, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 36: 273–289. (Scholar)
- Prigogine, I., 1980, From Being to Becoming. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman. (Scholar)
- Redhead, M., 1995, “More ado about nothing”, Foundations of Physics, 25: 123–137. (Scholar)
- Reichenbach, H., 1956, The Direction of Time, Berkeley, University of Los Angeles Press. (Scholar)
- Sober, E., 1988, “The Principle of the Common Cause”, in Probability and Causality, J. Fetzer (ed.). Dordrecht: Reidel, pp. 211–229. (Scholar)
- Spirtes, P., Glymour, C. & Scheines, R., 1993, Causation, Prediction and Search, Berlin: Springer Verlag. (Scholar)
- Uffink, J., 1999, “The principle of the common cause faces the Bernstein paradox”, Philosophy of Science, 66: S512-S525. (Scholar)
- Van Fraassen, B., 1980, The Scientific Image, Oxford: Clarendon Press. (Scholar)
- Van Fraassen, B., 1982, “The Charybdis of Realism: Epistemological Implications of Bell's Inequality”, Synthese, 52: 25–38. (Scholar)
Generated Mon May 20 17:54:47 2013
