- Tue Jul 07, 2015 4:49 pm
#19049
Hi everyone,
In this causal flawed stimulus the author states that "fluorid bone cancer" and concludes that "NO fluoride NO cancer". In real world sense this flaw is abvious but in LSAT don't we have a rule that if the cause (fluoride) is absent the effect cannot acure, because cause is THE ONLY cause for the stated effect? So that when there is no fluoride, there could be no bone cancer? In other words the claim is dismissed because there could be some other alternate causes??
Thanks!
In this causal flawed stimulus the author states that "fluorid bone cancer" and concludes that "NO fluoride NO cancer". In real world sense this flaw is abvious but in LSAT don't we have a rule that if the cause (fluoride) is absent the effect cannot acure, because cause is THE ONLY cause for the stated effect? So that when there is no fluoride, there could be no bone cancer? In other words the claim is dismissed because there could be some other alternate causes??
Thanks!