When it comes to CAUSATION strengthening and CAUSATION weakening questions, I know how to do them, but I have a hard time determining if causation is in the conclusion, which is needed to approach these questions correctly.

Can some please tell me what to toll for in order to do the correct?

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4 comments

  • Sunday, Dec 13 2015

    This is an Achilles' heel of mine - thx for the indicator list @Accounts Playable :)

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  • Sunday, Dec 13 2015

    By no means an exhaustive list of indicators:

    caused by

    because of

    responsible for

    reason for

    leads to

    induced by

    promoted by

    determined by

    produced by

    product of

    played a role in

    was a factor in

    is an effect of

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  • Saturday, Dec 12 2015

    Accounts playable is right, most of the causation weaken/strengthening questions that i have come across draw some correlation between two things and then make a casual conclusion that you either need to best weaken or best strengthen.

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  • Saturday, Dec 12 2015

    Usually, causation questions are pretty cookie cutter on the exam. For instance, the argument will begin with a correlation/relationship between two things, but then draw a causal conclusion. Key buzzwords that tend to tip you off that the argument is going to make a causal claim are "correlation," "cause," "therefore, the program was effective," "this proves/shows that X is the reason for Y." Things like that. The list is imperfect, and the LSAT is great at obfuscating its intentions, but it's a good start. With more practice, you'll eventually be able to just "see" that the question is causal since so many of them are so similar.

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