Causes, Enablers and the Law

Pilot Work for Cause & Allow Offence Studies - Extended Copy for SSRN eJournal Distribution. Extended from the Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2007

17 Pages Posted: 19 Jun 2019 Last revised: 2 Apr 2021

See all articles by Caren Frosch

Caren Frosch

University of Reading

Michelle B. Cowley-Cunningham

Dublin City University; University of Oxford - Centre for Socio-Legal Studies

Philip Johnson-Laird

Princeton University

Date Written: June 10, 2019

Abstract

Many theories in philosophy, law, and psychology, make no distinction in meaning between causing and enabling conditions. Yet, psychologically people readily make such distinctions each day. In this paper we report three experiments, showing that individuals distinguish between causes and enabling conditions in brief descriptions of wrongful outcomes. Respondents rate actions that bring about outcomes as causes, and actions that make possible the causal relation as enablers. Likewise, causers (as opposed to enablers) are rated as more responsible for the outcome, as liable to longer prison sentences, and as liable to pay higher fines. Moreover, the more actors involved, the more blame volume there is psychologically to be apportioned between them. The implication is that theories and the law in practice, both criminal and civil, may dangerously mismatch the intuitions of those to whom they are supposed to apply. The findings are discussed in light of contemporary psychological theories of how people reason about cause.

The paper presents the extended findings supplementary to the conference paper: Frosch, C. A., Johnson-Laird, P. N., Cowley, M. (2007). Don’t blame me your Honor, I’m only the enabler. Proceedings of the Twenty–Ninth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, p. 1755, Mahweh, N. J: Erlbaum. Nashville, USA. *Main findings now cited in the Oxford Handbook of Causal Reasoning.

Keywords: Causation and the Law, Experimental Psychology, Philosophy of Law

Suggested Citation

Frosch, Caren and Cowley-Cunningham, Michelle B. and Johnson-Laird, Philip, Causes, Enablers and the Law (June 10, 2019). Pilot Work for Cause & Allow Offence Studies - Extended Copy for SSRN eJournal Distribution. Extended from the Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2007 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3402122

Caren Frosch

University of Reading ( email )

Whiteknights
Reading, Berkshire RG6 6AH
United Kingdom

Michelle B. Cowley-Cunningham (Contact Author)

Dublin City University ( email )

DCU Business School
Dublin, Leinster
Ireland

University of Oxford - Centre for Socio-Legal Studies ( email )

Faculty of Law
Wolfson College
Oxford
United Kingdom

Philip Johnson-Laird

Princeton University ( email )

22 Chambers Street
Princeton, NJ 08544-0708
United States

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