The explanatory structure of unexplainable events: Causal constraints on magical reasoning.
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| Abstract | :  A common intuition, often captured in fiction, is that some impossible events (e.g., levitating a stone) are "more impossible" than others (e.g., levitating a feather). We investigated the source of this intuition, hypothesizing that graded notions of impossibility arise from explanatory considerations logically precluded by the violation at hand but still taken into account. Studies 1-4 involved college undergraduates (n = 357), and Study 5 involved preschool-aged children (n = 32). In Studies 1 and 2, participants saw pairs of magical spells that violated one of 18 causal principles-six physical, six biological, and six psychological-and were asked to indicate which spell would be more difficult to learn. Both spells violated the same causal principle but differed in their relation to a subsidiary principle. Participants' judgments of spell difficulty honored the subsidiary principle, even when participants were given the option of judging the two spells equally difficult. Study 3 replicated those effects with Likert-type ratings; Study 4 replicated them in an open-ended version of the task in which participants generated their own causal violations; and Study 5 replicated them with children. Taken together, these findings suggest that events that defy causal explanation are interpreted in terms of explanatory considerations that hold in the absence of such violations. | 
| Year of Publication | :  2017 | 
| Journal | :  Psychonomic bulletin & review | 
| Volume | :  24 | 
| Issue | :  5 | 
| Number of Pages | :  1573-1585 | 
| ISSN Number | :  1069-9384 | 
| URL | :  https://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-016-1206-3 | 
| DOI | :  10.3758/s13423-016-1206-3 | 
| Short Title | :  Psychon Bull Rev | 
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