Contact
Mailing Address:
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Fakultät für Philosophie, Wissenschaftstheorie
und Religionswissenschaft
Lehrstuhl für Philosophie und Entscheidungstheorie
Geschwister-Scholl-Platz 1
80539 München
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Fakultät für Philosophie, Wissenschaftstheorie
und Religionswissenschaft
Lehrstuhl für Philosophie und Entscheidungstheorie
Geschwister-Scholl-Platz 1
80539 München
Email:
Mario.Guenther@lmu.de
Further Information
Mario Günther is assistant professor at the Chair for Philosophy and Decision Theory. His main research interests lie in epistemology, logic, metaphysics, and artificial intelligence. He has proposed a theory of learning conditional information and an analysis of causation.
Previously, Mario was a research fellow in the School of Philosophy and a member of the Humanising Machine Intelligence project at The Australian National University. He obtained both his PhD and masters degree from LMU. For more information, visit his webpage.
Selected Publications
- Difference-Making Causation, Journal of Philosophy (forthcoming), with Holger Andreas.
- Ramsey’s Conditionals, Synthese (forthcoming), with Caterina Sisti.
- Epistemic Sensitivity and Evidence, Inquiry (forthcoming).
- Counterfactuals for Causal Responsibility in Legal Contexts, Artificial Intelligence and Law (forthcoming), with Holger Andreas and Matthias Armgardt.
- Regularity and Inferential Theories of Causation, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2021), with Holger Andreas.
- Algorithmic and Human Decision Making: For a Double Standard of Transparency, AI & Society (2021), with Atoosa Kasirzadeh.
- A Ramsey Test Analysis of Causation for Causal Models, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science (2021), with Holger Andreas.
- Causation in Terms of Production, Philosophical Studies (2020), with Holger Andreas.
- On the Ramsey Test Analysis of 'Because', Erkenntnis (2019), with Holger Andreas.
- Learning Conditional Information by Jeffrey Imaging on Stalnaker Conditionals, Journal of Philosophical Logic (2018).