- Fri Dec 20, 2019 9:51 pm
#72733
Hi Eric! Let's take a closer look at what exactly is flawed about this problem, and what is flawed about Cause and Effect reasoning on the LSAT in general. Take this sophomoric example:
"Professor Jones surveyed the students who showed up to her university class this morning regarding their alcohol consumption. She found that half of those students had consumed at least 6 alcoholic beverages the night before. Yet since they were in class, one can conclude that consuming at least 6 alcoholic beverages does not contribute to missing class."
This argument contains the same flaw as our stimulus: just because something isn't sufficient to single-handedly bring about an outcome, doesn't mean that it can't contribute to that outcome. I think that when you said “No maybe there is a causal relationship between slipped disks and back pain, just not all the time," that's not quite what we're saying with answer choice (B). Instead, it's more like we're saying, "The fact that slipped disks don't single-handedly cause back pain does not necessarily mean that they don't in some way contribute to back pain."
Cause and Effect relationships on the LSAT love to singularly ascribe causation. Like, sticking with the same theme: "Having 6 drinks caused me to miss class". This is a Flaw, since (if you want to get philosophical for a second) every single event that has ever occurred has been caused by multiple things. Maybe the 6 drinks contributed to me missing class. But there are infinite other factors that also contributed to me missing class, like 1) not setting my alarm volume high enough, or 2) me having a sluggish personality, or 3) me going to a school that doesn't really care about attendance, or 4) me being born to parents that don't emphasize work ethic, or 5) the Big Bang, etc etc. Saying that exactly one thing or that some specific combination of things caused an event is, by its very nature, always an oversimplification.
So assigning causation to any one thing, as in "A caused B" - is a flaw. It is not a flaw to say that A may have contributed to B. But it is a flaw to explicitly rule out the possibility that A may have contributed to B. That is what our stimulus is doing in this problem. Cause and Effect relationships can be tricky, and practicing this stuff is key. But remember, whenever a stimulus tries to say that "Oh, this causes this", or "Oh, this definitely doesn't cause this", there is flawed reasoning at work! Hope that helps!