- Mon Feb 28, 2022 5:38 pm
#93983
I think you may have that rationale backwards, Christmaspuppy. Answer C, if true, means that the folks who voluntarily put on their headlights all the time are doing so BECAUSE they are careful, rather than that they are careful because they have their lights on. It may not be having their lights on that keeps them from being involved in collisions, but their careful driving is the real cause. If that's so, then forcing the careless drivers to put their lights on might have no impact, because they are still not careful.
Answer E made me pause a second, so I see your confusion there. What it's saying is that there is poor visibility in the places that require the use of headlights, and that might explain why those places have more accidents than places with better visibility. But where that answer fails is that it doesn't explain why requiring the use of headlights at all times does nothing to REDUCE the number of collisions IN THOSE PLACES.
Let's imagine a place that is always foggy, and the roads are curvy and mountainous so you can't often see far down the road in front of you even when it's clear. This is not a safe place to drive! You would expect such a place to have more accidents than a place that is sunny and has straight roads on flat plains where you can see for miles and miles in both directions. But why wouldn't making people turn on their headlights reduce the number of collisions there? If I see lights coming through the fog ahead, or lighting up the canyon walls around me as I approach a curve, wouldn't that help me avoid at least some collisions? The data says that's not helping at all, and that's the paradox that answer E never addresses.
Adam M. Tyson
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