- Mon Jul 31, 2017 4:58 pm
#37833
Good question! Sometimes it can be hard to tell causal reasoning apart from conditional reasoning. Here are some key differences that can help you tell them apart --
In general, cause/effect statements are related in time: the cause must happen first, and the effect happens second. In a conditional relationship, there is generally no time limitation -- the sufficient condition can happen before, after, or at the same time as the necessary condition. In this question, the political scientist tells us that people become unenthusiastic about voting after they adopt a certain belief. The belief about government's inability to solve problems necessarily comes before a decrease in turnout. There's nothing here that indicates that the relationship could happen in reverse.
Another key difference is that in causal reasoning, the cause always makes the effect happen (by contrast in conditional reasoning the two terms may be related but not necessary caused by one another). This cause/effect occurs here: the belief adopted by voters causes low turnout.
I hope that helps clear things up. Good luck!
Athena Dalton
dbpk wrote:Hi dbpk,Administrator wrote:Complete Question ExplanationHello! I was wondering why this line of reasoning was considered causal and not conditional
- Cause Effect
Believe important problems solved by large unenthusiastic about voting
attitude shifts (not government action)
Good question! Sometimes it can be hard to tell causal reasoning apart from conditional reasoning. Here are some key differences that can help you tell them apart --
In general, cause/effect statements are related in time: the cause must happen first, and the effect happens second. In a conditional relationship, there is generally no time limitation -- the sufficient condition can happen before, after, or at the same time as the necessary condition. In this question, the political scientist tells us that people become unenthusiastic about voting after they adopt a certain belief. The belief about government's inability to solve problems necessarily comes before a decrease in turnout. There's nothing here that indicates that the relationship could happen in reverse.
Another key difference is that in causal reasoning, the cause always makes the effect happen (by contrast in conditional reasoning the two terms may be related but not necessary caused by one another). This cause/effect occurs here: the belief adopted by voters causes low turnout.
I hope that helps clear things up. Good luck!
Athena Dalton