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"Issues about microfoundations"

4 Comments -

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Blogger Jesús P. Zamora Bonilla said...

Hi, Daniel
one thought I have on this topic is that, actually, causality (contrarily to explanation) has nothing to do with 'higher' or 'lower'. There is nothing like "downward" nor "upward" causality, for causality has just one direction: from past to future. It is some events what cause other (immediately futre) events.
Levels only enter when we take into account our DESCRIPTIONS of events; we can choose to describe an event or series of events with the help of some concepts or with the help of other concepts, and these descriptions can (if we are lucky) have the form of robust regularities empirically well founded. This will allow us to design a network of regularities that we can use to EXPLAIN or UNDERSTAND those events, but the events themselves, and the relations of causality between them, are totally indifferent to the question about 'from what level you choose to describe them'.
So, 'microfoundations' are useful as long as they help us to have such a network of empirically and intellectually useful regularities, but whether we prefer a micro-macro explanation or a macro-macro or a macro-micro or a meso-meso one, should have absolutely no implications from the 'metaphysical' point of view about what causes what.

October 6, 2013 at 5:10 AM

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October 6, 2013 at 4:19 PM

Blogger Peter Dorman said...

Sorry about the previous post; it was garbled. It should read like this:

I have a different take on the weak form (which I accept): macro level claims should not be inconsistent with all plausible micro level explanations. In practice, this means that, if someone shows you your macro claim is inconsistent with their micro model, you are obligated to argue either (a) the model is intrinsically flawed, (b) the model could actually be consistent with your claim, or most likely (c) the model does not exhaust the range of plausible micro models. The latter is similar to your weak position, except that it can be satisfied in other ways than sketching an alternative. For instance, you could show that the model in question is sensitive to assumptions that could plausibly be altered. That would be enough, in my opinion; you don't need to go the extra mile and show, even sketchily, how a different set of assumptions would support your claim. There is a big difference between demonstrating a micro argument for x and demonstrating that a micro argument against x is not dispositive.

October 6, 2013 at 5:39 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Isn't this more or less the same as or similar too Elias' figurational approach.

October 7, 2013 at 5:26 AM

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