Counterfactuals Need Not be Comparative: The Case of “As If”

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30 (5-6):461-462 (2007)
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Abstract

Byrne (2005) assumes that counterfactual thinking requires a comparison of facts with an imagined alternative. In our view, however, this assumption is unnecessarily restrictive. We argue that individuals do not necessarily engage in counterfactual simulations exclusively to evaluate factual reality. Instead, comparative evaluation is often suspended in favor of experiencing the counterfactual simulation as if it were real

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Keith Markman
Ohio University

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