- Mon Apr 27, 2020 10:09 am
#75074
Why is (E) incorrect? Does this answer choice not show that the effect can happen without the cause, which is one of the ways to weaken a causal argument?
I am also not clear on whether to think of this as a conditional argument, as the initial explanation suggested, or a causal one. It seems to have a clear causal conclusion (i.e., that the causal claim is wrong.)
Edit: my more general question about causation is whether there can be multiple causes for one effect. The LRB says that, on the LSAT, when the author makes a claim that X caused Y, X must be the only cause of Y and that every time X occurs, Y occurs. Is this always the case? I seem to recall some LSAT questions, like https://forum.powerscore.com/lsat/viewtopic.php?t=6739 on PT71, that seem to suggest that X is only a factor in Y. In this case, in answer choice (E), the neutron stars occurs without a supernova explanation (so the effect happens without the cause), and so the causal claim that supernovas cause neutron stars (i.e., supernovas always cause neutron stars) is weakened. Why is this wrong?
I am also not clear on whether to think of this as a conditional argument, as the initial explanation suggested, or a causal one. It seems to have a clear causal conclusion (i.e., that the causal claim is wrong.)
Edit: my more general question about causation is whether there can be multiple causes for one effect. The LRB says that, on the LSAT, when the author makes a claim that X caused Y, X must be the only cause of Y and that every time X occurs, Y occurs. Is this always the case? I seem to recall some LSAT questions, like https://forum.powerscore.com/lsat/viewtopic.php?t=6739 on PT71, that seem to suggest that X is only a factor in Y. In this case, in answer choice (E), the neutron stars occurs without a supernova explanation (so the effect happens without the cause), and so the causal claim that supernovas cause neutron stars (i.e., supernovas always cause neutron stars) is weakened. Why is this wrong?