Potential outcomes, causal inference, and virtual history

A few years ago I picked up the book Virtual History: Alternatives and Counterfactuals, edited by Niall Ferguson. It’s a book of essays by historians on possible alternative courses of history (what if Charles I had avoided the English civil war, what if there had been no American Revolution, what if Irish home rule had been established in 1912, …).

There have been and continue to be other books of this sort (for example, What If: Eminent Historians Imagine What Might Have Been, edited by Robert Cowley), but what makes the Ferguson book different is that he (and most of the other authors in his book) are fairly rigorous in only considering possible actions that the relevant historical personalities were actually considering. In the words of Ferguson’s introduction: “We shall consider as plausible or probable only those alternatives which we can show on the basis of contemporary evidence that contemporaries actually considered.”

I like this idea because it is a potentially rigorous extension of the now-standard “Rubin model” of causal inference. Continue reading