Four independent intellectual traditions have converged, through different methods and withoutmutual engagement, on a single conclusion: that what passes for causal explanation in historicalcontexts is largely a retrospective narrative projection rather than the discovery of amind-independent relation. Narrativists in philosophy of history (Danto, Mink, White, Ricoeur,Ankersmit) established that historical causation is constituted by narrative emplotment. Cognitivescientists (Fischhoff, Kahneman, Taleb, Groß et al.) identified the psychologicalmechanisms—hindsight bias, WYSIATI, the narrative fallacy—that produce this constructionautomatically and below conscious awareness. Complexity theorists (Prigogine, Kauffman,Batterman, Gould) demonstrated that the unpredictability onto which these narratives are projected isstructural, not merely epistemic. Sociologists of science (Merton, Kuhn, Latour, Simonton) showedempirically that even in science, causal narratives are retrospective constructions that systematicallymisattribute structural outcomes to individual agency. This paper provides the first systematicintegration of all four traditions and argues that their convergence reveals a neglected philosophicalcategory: "retrospective causal narrative" as a third mode of causal cognition, irreducible to eitherstructural-physical causation (the efficient causation of physics) or perceptual causal labeling (theMichottean launching effect). This mode operates by projecting coherence backward ontostructurally indeterminate processes. The paper defends ontological realism about causal processeswhile maintaining constructivism about causal explanation, and addresses five families ofcounterargument from mechanistic, interventionist, scientific realist, causal process, and historicalrealist traditions.
Philos Sophia Franny (Mon,) studied this question.