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Causal Reasoning. Observation Large text on my Internet screen Question Why the large text? Hypothesis Accessibility features are activated Evidence Normal ways of adjustment don’t work. Testing Causal Reasoning. Does hypothesis account for event? Account for all relevant elements
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Causal Reasoning • Observation • Large text on my Internet screen • Question • Why the large text? • Hypothesis • Accessibility features are activated • Evidence • Normal ways of adjustment don’t work.
Testing Causal Reasoning • Does hypothesis account for event? • Account for all relevant elements • Suggest a causal agent • Has analogous hypothesis been shown to be accurate? • Is there a better hypothesis?
Causal Analogy • Observation • Some got sick at picnic, but not others. • Question • Why did some get sick? • Hypothesis • The potato salad was bad. • Evidence • The sick ones ate the potato salad.
Testing Causal Analogy • Are the cases reported accurately? • Does hypothesis account for event? • Account for all relevant elements • Suggest a causal agent • Is there a better contrast available? • Is there a better counter-analogy?
Causal Generalization • Sample of population • Suspected cause applied to one group. • Cause withheld from control group. • Does cause correlate with effect? • Is the significance beyond coincidence? • Could a cause produce both effects? • Does cause consistently precede effect? • Does cause have a plausible agent?
Exercise A1 • Observation • Birds observed before crash of bomber. • Question • What caused crash? • Hypothesis • Birds were sucked into engines • Evidence • This was the first crash of the new model. • Evaluation: Causal agent is clear and analogous examples exist.
Exercise A3 • Observation • Increase in literacy, standard of living, economy, and health. • Question • What caused these increases? • Hypothesis • Increase in population caused them. • Evidence: • Minds working together solve problems • Evaluation: Other plausible agents exist. How about other populous countries?
Exercise A5 • Observation • Dan White killed Mosconni and Milk. • Question • Why did he kill them? • Hypothesis • Junk foods made White go into frenzy. [He was not responsible for killings.] • Evidence: • His urge for junk foods was uncontrollable. • Evaluation: Is agent sufficient? Has it happened before?
Exercise B1 • Causal hypothesis: • An angel on the TV screen • An electronic phenomenon • Tests: • Ask others if they see an angel • Try to duplicate the image mechanically.
Exercise B3 • Causal hypothesis: • Americans are less fascinated with small cars. • Americans cars have improved in quality. • Tests: • See whether Americans are buying a higher percent of medium-sized cars. • See whether economic factors exist.
Exercise D1 • Cause: • Internship program at Mills University • Effect: • Mills students are more employable.
Exercise D3 • Cause: • American health care system is more expensive than the Canadian system. • Effect: • Lower-income Americans visit doctors and hospitals less than lower-income Canadians.
Exercise E1 • Observation: • Drop in production of goods • Enumerated causes: • Lazy blue-collar workers • Government regulations • New white-collar jobs (conclusion) • Other plausible causes? • Out-sourcing to other countries
Exercise F1 • Generalization: • Gun ownership can reduce crime. • Cause: • Fear of confronting victim with a gun • Effect: • Reduced crime when victims might have guns • Evaluation: • Are criminals telling the truth? • Is effect significant?
Exercise F3 • Generalization: • Lighting can control hyperactivity. • Cause: • Switch to incandescent lighting • Effect: • Reduced hyperactivity • Evaluation: • Small size of the sample • Lack of control group • Unexplained agent • Lack of consistent results
Exercise F5 • Generalization: • Gun training programs reduce crime. • Cause: • Training in the use of guns • Effect: • Reduced incidence of rape and robbery • Evaluation: • No control group (other possible causes?) • Were citizens of Kennesaw trained?