- Fri Nov 01, 2024 3:19 pm
#110296
HarmonRabb: "leads to" is one of the common causal indicators, not conditional. When one thing leads to another, or produces another, or inspires another, or brings about another, etc., there is an active relationship of the first thing proactively making the other thing occur. Conditional relationships are passive descriptions that do not necessarily imply any sort of activation like that. Add "leads to" to your list of causal clues!
apple1234567: The whole point of that basic causal assumption is that the author of the causal argument is making that assumption. That doesn't mean they are correct in doing so! In fact, that is the basic flaw in many causal arguments: the author assumes this is the only possible cause, which means they fail to consider other possible causes. That's the issue here. The author made that bad assumption, and the correct answer points out the fact that it's a bad assumption.
terranceof92 : In particular, pay attention to the language that indicates causal relationships and to the underlying flaws inherent in those claims, like failing to consider other possible causes, the cause happening without the effect, the effect happening without the cause, the cause and effect being reversed, and the underlying data being flawed.
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