- Mon Apr 27, 2020 4:42 pm
#75092
Hello,
First day on this forum!
I am confused about the part of the LRB about the central assumption of causal conclusions on the LSAT. Specifically, that when the LSAT speaker makes a causal claim, she is assuming that the stated cause is the only possible cause of that effect. So, if Preservative X is said to cause cancer, am I to understand whenever there is Preservative X, there is cancer? Moreover, Preservative X is the only possible thing that can lead to cancer (in the LSAT world of this particular question)?
My question stems from a particular problem in PT24, where the causal connection is that supernovas cause neutron stars, and the answer choice (E) tells us that the effect (neutron stars) occur without the cause (supernovas). This is, according to the LRB, one of the ways to weaken a causal argument, yet (E) is wrong [the conclusion there is to show that the cause does not lead to the effect, so weakening the original causal argument would strengthen that particular conclusion.] Link here: https://forum.powerscore.com/lsat/viewt ... 545&t=4694
But I post this question in this general section because it is a general question I have.
Am I correct in understanding that (1) what was mentioned in the LRB, that only the stated cause X could lead to the stated effect Y is true only for causal claims made in conclusions, (2) that there are some possibilities where the author might explicitly tell us that there are multiple potential causes, or that a stated cause is only one factor leading to an effect? (I'm thinking of the "birth weights" problem in PT71. Link here: https://forum.powerscore.com/lsat/viewtopic.php?t=6739)
Am I missing something?
First day on this forum!
I am confused about the part of the LRB about the central assumption of causal conclusions on the LSAT. Specifically, that when the LSAT speaker makes a causal claim, she is assuming that the stated cause is the only possible cause of that effect. So, if Preservative X is said to cause cancer, am I to understand whenever there is Preservative X, there is cancer? Moreover, Preservative X is the only possible thing that can lead to cancer (in the LSAT world of this particular question)?
My question stems from a particular problem in PT24, where the causal connection is that supernovas cause neutron stars, and the answer choice (E) tells us that the effect (neutron stars) occur without the cause (supernovas). This is, according to the LRB, one of the ways to weaken a causal argument, yet (E) is wrong [the conclusion there is to show that the cause does not lead to the effect, so weakening the original causal argument would strengthen that particular conclusion.] Link here: https://forum.powerscore.com/lsat/viewt ... 545&t=4694
But I post this question in this general section because it is a general question I have.
Am I correct in understanding that (1) what was mentioned in the LRB, that only the stated cause X could lead to the stated effect Y is true only for causal claims made in conclusions, (2) that there are some possibilities where the author might explicitly tell us that there are multiple potential causes, or that a stated cause is only one factor leading to an effect? (I'm thinking of the "birth weights" problem in PT71. Link here: https://forum.powerscore.com/lsat/viewtopic.php?t=6739)
Am I missing something?