Thursday, September 11, 2014

Sharing what I wrote in Graduate School. I think I intellectually, "Black Out" when I write....

Why are you unable to make a defensible causal claim based on an observed relationship between two variables?

The inability to make a defensible causal claim based on an observed relationship between two variables is because the two variables do not necessarily have a direct correlational effect upon one another.

This type of argumentation can be classified as one that is fallacious. This error in reasoning has been known as a syllogism in the field of philosophy. In order for the argument to be true, then the premise of the entire argument must be true as well.

Take into account the example of the “stereotype effect” that was given in the text. They briefly describe this “stereotype effect” to have an impact on a certain group that you are akin to based on a particular situation that you may fall into and how you may behave because of it.

One example that they had used was one that, until now, is difficult to understand. A particular study was conducted on individuals who were scheduled to take the Graduate Record Exam. They described a situation in which one particular group of individuals did not score well. After publicizing this information, the targeted group that they spoke of – the African American group, did not do well whereas the African Americans who had not been given any data on the success or failure rate of their cohorts performed where they should have performed normally.


A group of social scientists called the Behaviorists, have strictly opposed how one factor can be related to another factor. This phenomena would be “impossible to observe objectively” and thus did not make a considerable impact on the field of statistics.