- Fri May 29, 2020 6:57 pm
#75800
Hi Hope!
It sounds like you're confusing causal reasoning with conditional reasoning. Remember that these are two very different and distinct methods of reasoning--but it is certainly easy to get them to confused!
Mistaken Negations (as well as Mistaken Reversals and Contrapositives) only apply to conditional reasoning. In conditional reasoning, your sufficient condition indicates that a necessary condition must also occur and it is very important that you understand that the conditional relationship only goes in one direction so that you don't fall into the Mistaken Negation and Mistaken Reversal traps. It sounds like you understand how important the direction of that relationship is and you're already looking out for those traps--so great job!
In causal reasoning, the cause activates the effect. There's a temporal relationship (the cause has to happen before the effect) but it is not the same type of absolute unidirectional relationship that you have with conditional relationships. Rather, the cause and the effect go hand in hand. So when you have the cause, you should have the effect and when you have the effect you should have the cause. Of course, it is very difficult to prove causal relationships definitively, which is why causal conclusions are inherently flawed.
As you said, it's important to focus on the conclusion, but you have to consider the conclusion in the context of the argument rather than focusing on the conclusion to the exclusion of everything else. By reminding you to focus on the conclusion, we mean that you need to be very clear on the precise wording of the conclusion as well as clear on the premises that the author is using to support that conclusion--and often why those premises as stated don't fully support the conclusion as stated.
So in this question, the author is drawing a causal relationship between nutrition and behavior. As you point out, the conclusion tells us that there's a link between poor nutrition and violent behavior. But why does the author say that these results confirm this link? Because in the experiment, the inmates placed on a diet high in nutrients showed an improvement in behavior. So good nutrition causes violent behavior to improve; bad nutrition causes violent behavior to be worse. The cause and the effect are each along a spectrum from poor to good nutrition, and from more violent to less violent behavior. Basically the causal relationship is between nutrition and violent behavior such that poor nutrition causes more violent behavior and good nutrition causes less violent behavior.
With a causal conclusion in a Strengthen question, you are basically looking for an answer choice that does one of five things: a) eliminates an alternate cause; b) shows when the cause occurs, the effect also occurs; c) shows when the cause does not occur, the effect does not occur; d) eliminates the possibility that it is the reverse cause and effect; or e) supports the data. In this case, answer choice (E) strengthens the causal link between nutrition and violent behavior by saying when you don't have the good nutrition (the cause of improved behavior in the experiment), you don't have an improvement in violent behavior (the effect of good nutrition in the experiment). It strengthens the causal relationship by showing that the inmates on the high nutrition diet had an improvement in behavior that the inmates on the low nutrition diet did not, suggesting that the change in nutrition is what resulted in the change in behavior.
So there are two main takeaways here:
1.) Be careful not to confuse conditional and causal reasoning
2.) Focus on the conclusion within the context of the rest of the argument.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey