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arxiv: 2505.03732 · v2 · pith:5WVHCPG4new · submitted 2025-05-06 · 💻 cs.MA

A Communication-First Account of Explanation

classification 💻 cs.MA
keywords explanationaccountcausalcognitivecommunication-firstphilosophicalworkaccounts
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This paper develops a formal account of causal explanation, grounded in a theory of conversational pragmatics, and inspired by the interventionist idea that explanation is about asking and answering what-if-things-had-been-different questions. We illustrate the fruitfulness of the account, relative to previous accounts, by showing that widely recognised explanatory virtues emerge naturally, as do subtle empirical patterns concerning the impact of norms on causal judgments. This shows the value of a communication-first approach to explanation: getting clear on explanation's communicative dimension is an important prerequisite for philosophical work on explanation. The result is a simple but powerful framework for incorporating insights from the cognitive sciences into philosophical work on explanation, which will be useful for philosophers or cognitive scientists interested in explanation.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Why Someone Asked "Why": Foil Inference in Human and LLM Question Interpretation

    cs.HC 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    People infer the foil of a why-question mainly from hindsight expectations about what the asker finds surprising after the outcome.