Say that p is a Leibnizian explanation of why q rather than r provided that p explains why q and not r and it is not possible for p to explain r.
I am inclined to think that a Leibnizian explanation of why q rather than r is a contrastive explanation of why q rather than r. But does the converse hold? Are contrastive explanations always Leibnizian?
The answer may depend on what we do about background assumptions in explanations—whether we count them as part of the explanation. I ask why you are wearing a watch on your right wrist rather than your left. You say:
- I didn't want to be like everyone else.
But perhaps we should take the background assumptions to be tacitly a part of the explanans in (1). Thus, maybe the real explanans is:
- I didn't want to be like everyone else, and everyone else was wearing watches on their left wrist.
- I didn't want to be like everyone else, and everyone else was wearing watches on their left wrist, and I had no reason to frustrate my minor preferences.
So it looks like it's hard to defend the claim that contrastive explanations are Leibnizian. But perhaps we can defend the claim that contrastive explanations are weakly Leibnizian, where p is a weakly Leibnizian explanation of why q rather than r provided p explains q and not r, but p does not explain r in close worlds where it is true that r. I like the context-sensitivity of the "in close worlds". But if one doesn't like it, one could instead go for:
- p is a weakly Leibnizian explanation of why q rather than r if and only if p explains why q and not r, and were r to hold, it would be false that p explains r.
It is now fairly plausible that contrastive explanations are weakly Leibnizian. Is it plausible that weakly Leibnizian explanations are contrastive? I think so.
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