ohthatpatrick Wrote:Question Type:
Flaw
(A) Yes! If some but not all types of damage to ch6 lead to schizophrenia, does that weaken the author's argument? Of course. The fact that some types of damage DO lead to schizo basically refutes the conclusion. And the fact that some types of damage DO not lead to schizo explains the exceptions in the author's evidence in which people do have damage but don't get schizo.
(C) Tempting a bit, since the author seems to reach a hastily broad conclusion. But there's no way to say the sample is "unrepresentative". It seems like she is considering cases of people with/without damage to ch6 and with/without adult schizophrenia. Her bad move is not that she assumes these people are representative of all cases; her bad move is thinking that since damage to ch6 and schizo are not invariably associated, they must have no causal connection.
#officialexplanation
I switched from "A" to "C" in Blind Review and Now I am more convinced that it is "C".
I remember reading a different post from a different instructor who said that when you see a study being cited you want to check for potential population sample bias. In this case, how did we know though that the sample population was not biased because all it says is "some people" the author "knows" and for all we know this "some" person could be like two people. I understand that the mistake the author makes is then going on saying there is no causation because there are cases where the correlation does not hold but to reach this step in reasoning doesn't the author do what "C" describes where it depends and draws on the exception cases? In other words, the author goes from saying there isn't like some 100% correlation which means that there is no causation but this premise is supported from the "some people" the author knows?
The other reason why I switched from A to C is that I noticed on review the stimulus also said there are people the author knows that has schizophrenia but do not have the chromosome damage. However, this part i understand now from the post above in that the existing research on correlation never said the damage MUST all the time cause it and, more importantly, be the only cause of schizophrenia.