- Tue Oct 29, 2024 11:59 am
#110227
The inconsistency is a huge problem here, attorneyatpaw. The author says that you cannot draw any valid inferences due to the sample size, but then proceeds to draw an inference, completely contradicting themself on that issue. You can't have it both ways!
Yes, there is a causal problem here, and if there was an answer that described a failure to consider an alternate cause for the reduction in PCBs, or one that clearly indicated that the reduction happened before the ban, those would have been much more attractive. But D focuses on the very unlikely reversal issue, which makes little sense in this case. How could a general reduction in exposure to a toxic chemical cause a law to be passed? The way you rationalized it required telling yourself a bit of a story to make it work, about legislators noticing a connection to health. Answers that need that much help just to make sense are not good answers! The right answer is right with no help at all, and answer A is exactly that kind of answer.
Adam M. Tyson
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