“…A central question in research on causal cognition concerns the role of norms. It is well-known that both statistical and moral norms influence judgments of actual causation (i.e., a judgment that some particular event, e, was the cause of some particular outcome, o) (Alicke, 2000;Gerstenberg, Goodman, Lagnado, & Tenenbaum, 2015;Hitchcock & Knobe, 2009;Kominsky, Phillips, Gerstenberg, Lagnado, & Knobe, 2015;Morris, Phillips, Gerstenberg, & Cushman, 2019;Morris et al, 2018). Specifically, when some outcome o depends on the occurrence of a set of antecedent events, e 1 Àe n , people are more inclined to select a given antecedent event e i as the cause of o if e i was either very unlikely to happen or morally prohibited.…”