- Tue Nov 17, 2015 7:59 pm
#20690
I find this topic to be confusing. The lsat does a good job with tricking people in this regard. So how can I really tell the difference between these, do I need the actual terms "caused" to infer causation, or what else do I look for when looking to see that something is actually causation and not just a correlation.
1)For example, upon doing a practice test I saw this in the lr section "The more cholesterol we have in our blood, the higher the risk we shall die of a heart attack". It is really tempting to infer causation had the phrase "the higher the risk" not been supplied. Since it reads if a happens then b happens. Would this be a causation situation in that case:"if we have more cholesterol in our blood, then we shall die of a heart attack"? Or do we physically need the term "caused" to infer causation and that without it we have a correlation regardless even if taking the phrase "the higher the risk" out (in other words taking out the probability from the sentence and making it more assertive).
2)And also going back to this problem since we are on the topic (which is from the october 1999 lsat -"these days, drug companies and health professionals alike are focusing.."), we eliminate A because causation/correlation aside there are many other things that lead to heart problems, so even in the event high cholesterol does cause heart disease, if you do not have high cholesterol it does not mean your risk is low as there could be other things that contribute to the same problem? How is my reasoning here?
3) And E is right, since smoking, drinking, and exercise (i.e. lifestyle choices) influence cholesterol which increases risk of heart problems, so altering any of those lifestyle choices can affect our probability of getting or not getting heart disease via its effect on cholesterol. Just making sure here as well!
(I know I am over analyzing on these easy problems, but I think they can shed light on bigger things that can help with harder problems).
This topic is still confusing to me and I would like to truly understand how to properly infer whether something is causation and or correlation, and how the problem should be approached differently upon making that inference. Thanks in advance!
1)For example, upon doing a practice test I saw this in the lr section "The more cholesterol we have in our blood, the higher the risk we shall die of a heart attack". It is really tempting to infer causation had the phrase "the higher the risk" not been supplied. Since it reads if a happens then b happens. Would this be a causation situation in that case:"if we have more cholesterol in our blood, then we shall die of a heart attack"? Or do we physically need the term "caused" to infer causation and that without it we have a correlation regardless even if taking the phrase "the higher the risk" out (in other words taking out the probability from the sentence and making it more assertive).
2)And also going back to this problem since we are on the topic (which is from the october 1999 lsat -"these days, drug companies and health professionals alike are focusing.."), we eliminate A because causation/correlation aside there are many other things that lead to heart problems, so even in the event high cholesterol does cause heart disease, if you do not have high cholesterol it does not mean your risk is low as there could be other things that contribute to the same problem? How is my reasoning here?
3) And E is right, since smoking, drinking, and exercise (i.e. lifestyle choices) influence cholesterol which increases risk of heart problems, so altering any of those lifestyle choices can affect our probability of getting or not getting heart disease via its effect on cholesterol. Just making sure here as well!
(I know I am over analyzing on these easy problems, but I think they can shed light on bigger things that can help with harder problems).
This topic is still confusing to me and I would like to truly understand how to properly infer whether something is causation and or correlation, and how the problem should be approached differently upon making that inference. Thanks in advance!