"The Journal of the Philosophy of History" Explores Historical Counterfactuals
I am happy to help publicize the appearance of a
special issue of The Journal of the
Philosophy of History on historical counterfactuals. The editor, Aviezer Tucker, was kind
enough to invite me last year to contribute to the volume and I responded by
writing an article entitled, “The Ways We Wonder What If? Towards a Typology of Historical
Counterfactuals.”
At the moment, the article is accessible only on The Journal of the Philosophy of History’s
website. Once I am legally permitted, I
will provide a link to a PDF version of the article (but that will take a bit
of time, I imagine).
Before saying a few things about the article, I
should note that the issue contains a variety of fascinating essays, including:
·
Aviezer Tucker, “Historiographic
Counterfactuals and the Philosophy of Historiography.”
·
Alexander Marr, “Applying
D. K. Lewis’s Counterfactual Theory of Causation to the Philosophy of
Historiography.”
·
Yemima Ben-Menahem,
“If Counterfactuals Were Excluded from Historical Reasoning….”
·
Daniel Woolf, “Concerning
Altered Pasts: Reflections of an
Early Modern Historian.”
·
Cass Sunstein, “Historical
Explanations Always Involve Counterfactual History.”
·
Daniel Nolan, “The
Possibilities of History.”
·
Richard Evans, “Response.”
As for my article: as I point out in the
introduction, the article draws much of its material from work I’ve done over
the last three years for The
Counterfactual History Review.
And as the abstract makes clear, the article “seeks to refine our
understanding of historical counterfactuals by classifying them into a new typology. After
providing a systematic definition of counterfactuals, I divide them up into
five different categories: causal, emotive, temporal, spatial, and manneristic. Within each of these
categories, I identify eighteen different types of counterfactuals, which I
classify with descriptive names and illustrate with specific examples from
recent works of historiography. The different types of counterfactuals
vary in numerous ways, but they are all linked by their rhetorical elements.
These elements, in turn, help explain the present-day popularity of
wondering how history might have been different.”
For those of you who are interested,
the eighteen types of counterfactuals that comprise the larger typology are as
follows:
Causal
1. The Cleopatra’s Nose Counterfactual
2. The Deterministic Counterfactual
3. The Reversionary Counterfactual
Emotive
1. The Missed Oppportunity Counterfactual
2. The Close Call Counterfactual
3. The Silver Lining Counterfactual
Temporal
1. The Rewind Counterfactual
2. The Fast Forward Counterfactual
3. The Clockstopper Counterfactual
4. The Rip Van Winkle Counterfactual
5. The Connecticut Yankee Counterfactual
6. The Transmigrating Soul Counterfactual
Spatial
1. The Trading Places Counterfactual
2. The Transplant Counterfactual
3. The Geographical Counterfactual
Manneristic
1. The Polemical Analogy Counterfactual
2. The Nesting Doll Counterfactual
3. The Hybrid Counterfactual
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