Abstract
We argue in favor of merely disjunctive effects, namely cases in which an event or fact, C,
is not a cause of an effect, E1, and is also not a cause of a distinct effect, E2, and yet C is a
cause of the disjunctive effect (E1 orE2). Disjunctive effects let us retain the additivity and
the distributivity of causation. According to additivity, if C is a cause of E1 and C is a
cause of E2, then C is a cause of E1 and E2. According to distributivity, if C is a cause of E1
and E2, then C is a cause of E1 and C is a cause of E2. We draw an analogy between
causation and intensional notions like believing, wanting, and owing, which also admit of
merely disjunctive cases. We argue that both the Lewisian counterfactual account of causation
(including its recent emendation by Sartorio) and the contrastive account of causation
fail to properly account for this phenomenon.