- Mon Oct 14, 2024 11:54 am
#109890
When an author presents evidence of a correlation, and then concludes that the relationship is causal, there are certain standard flaws inherent in the argument, one of which is that there could be some other cause for the alleged effect, or for both of the observed phenomena in the correlation. Answer A isn't something you would assume to be true, but it is something that is a possible alternate explanation for the correlation that the author failed to consider, and that's why it describes one of the flaws in this argument.
There are other flaws here, too. For example, the author failed to consider that being ill might cause one to sleep more. The causal relationship could be reversed.
They also failed to consider potential problems with the study. Even though they looked at a million people, could it be that those people all lived in one geographic region, or were all around the same age as each other? They might be an unrepresentative sample of the general population. Or what if the questions were worded in such a way as to influence the answers, like "do you feel generally healthier when you sleep less than 8 hours a night?" That might indicate some bias in the questions, which undermines the conclusion.
Regarding answer A, perhaps certain lifestyle factors cause one to sleep less AND be healthier, like maybe getting up early to go to the gym? Maybe there is some genetic factor that makes people generally less healthy and also that causes them to sleep more? Maybe there is something in their diet that leads to both poor health and more sleep, like something that saps your energy and vitality?
Start by recognizing that there may not be any causal relationship at all, and that the author could be completely wrong about that. Then, thinking of some third thing that causes the alleged cause isn't so surprising, because it never was the cause in the first place! That was just a mistake made by the author.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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