- Wed Jul 22, 2020 5:11 pm
#77361
Hi PCA,
The Bible is correct that in LSAT land, only one cause can exist for the effect. That's why they are so easy to weaken---any alternate cause weakens a causal relationship. In the real world, we know that effects are complex, and often have multiple causes. On the LSAT, we think of the relationship as being 1-1. One cause---one effect. This helps us understand how alternate causes, cause without the effect, and so on would weaken the relationship.
I'm not sure where you are getting the causal relationship between high education and lifestyle choices. Our stimulus states that good health is caused by informed lifestyle choices, which connects back to the high education levels mentioned earlier in the stimulus. But the author does not draw any causal relationship between informed lifestyle choices and high education levels.
Hope that helps!
Rachael
The Bible is correct that in LSAT land, only one cause can exist for the effect. That's why they are so easy to weaken---any alternate cause weakens a causal relationship. In the real world, we know that effects are complex, and often have multiple causes. On the LSAT, we think of the relationship as being 1-1. One cause---one effect. This helps us understand how alternate causes, cause without the effect, and so on would weaken the relationship.
I'm not sure where you are getting the causal relationship between high education and lifestyle choices. Our stimulus states that good health is caused by informed lifestyle choices, which connects back to the high education levels mentioned earlier in the stimulus. But the author does not draw any causal relationship between informed lifestyle choices and high education levels.
Hope that helps!
Rachael