- Mon May 11, 2020 1:12 pm
#75379
Hi cinnamonpeeler,
Whether or not that assumption is being made depends on the language of the conclusion. Here, the conclusion waters down the causal relationship, indicating that the author has not assumed napping is the only cause. The author says that it is "very likely that napping tends to cause insomnia." Since it's only "very likely," the author admits there's a possibility something else could be involved. Since napping only "tends to" cause insomnia (rather than saying "napping causes insomnia," without qualification), the author admits there could be other factors involved in some cases of insomnia.
Watch the language of the conclusion. The Logical Reasoning Bible will tell you that the assumption you're thinking of is being made when the author asserts (without qualification) a sole cause. If the conclusion is, "napping causes insomnia," then that assumption is being made. With the kinds of likelihood and tendency qualifiers you see here, that assumption is not being made.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant