I would not classify this as a causal argument,
GGIBA003@FIU.EDU, because the author is not using a correlation to prove that one thing causes another. Rather, the author is arguing that one thing is NOT causing another - back belts are NOT causing a reduction in injuries. Thus, you should not look for a causal answer, except perhaps to think about how the data fails to support the conclusion.
Answer C is wrong because the argument does not assume that one factor causally contributes to another, but is arguing the opposite, that one factor is NOT contributing to another.
Answer D is wrong because the author doesn't presume anything about preventing any effect.
Both of these answers are inaccurate descriptions of what occurred in the stimulus. They are, in a word, false, and since Flaw in the Reasoning questions are in the same family as Must Be True questions (which we call the Prove Family), the correct answer must be true. Any answer that describes something that didn't happen, as these do, must be a wrong answer!
Oh, by the way, the use of "a phenomenon" in answer D is not a problem, because the argument does deal with a phenomenon - back injuries in the workplace. That word causes a lot of students to pause and scratch their heads a bit, but it just means "something that happens." Don't let the fancy words confuse you!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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