- Fri Dec 14, 2018 7:18 pm
#61199
Hi Lsat180Please,
When we have a flaw question with a causal stimulus, the correct answer is usually one of 4 mistakes the stimulus makes:
1. Fails to consider an alternate cause. The most common type, always think about whether an alternate cause could plausibly exist that causes only the effect, or could cause both the purported cause and the effect.
2. Reverse Causation. There are only so many situations this makes sense, so always test to see if it makes sense to reverse the cause-effect relationship. When it does, that will usually be the correct answer.
3. Assuming causation based on correlation. Is there actually evidence that one thing caused the other, or is it possible that they only tend to correlate, perhaps because they're both caused by some third event?
4. Assuming causation based on temporal sequence. Just because one things happens before another, doesn't mean they're necessarily related--although an effect must always occur after a cause, so this does rule out reverse causation.
Here, we're given both a valid study that utilizes one possible cause (medical self-help books) for the effect of fewer medical visits, and then given a premise about a second cause, family health, that also causes the effect. Where the stimulus goes wrong is assuming that because one thing (family health) can cause the effect, then it must be the only thing that causes it, so the study's cause (medical books) must be causing the known effect (family health), which in turn causes the effect of fewer medical visits.
The problem is that we don't know whether the medical books are leading directly to fewer doctor visits without having any effect on family health; it's plausible that having the medical books in the homes are leading families to go to the doctor less, either because they realize minor illnesses don't require medical attention, or they have a greater belief that they can handle more medical issues themselves, without professional medical attention. And what effect, if any, this has on family health is unknown.
(D) explains this issue with the stimulus in abstract terms (although it could have been explained in a way that is specific to the stimulus) making it the correct answer choice.
Hope this clears things up!