Causal essay– CasperTheGhost

Why Euthanize?

Its pretty basic, the effect of euthanasia is always going to be death. That isn’t a brain busters that people are trying to wrap their heads around. The real question that people struggle to grasp is what causes people to want to be euthanized.  To most people, the thought of ending their own life is foreign, they have trouble grasping why anyone would want to do it, and tell themselves that the thought would never cross their mind.  For the people that qualify for euthanasia, this is not only a thought for them, it is a serious option.

The desire of euthanasia can be the effect of years of dealing with the constant pain that certain terminal diseases can cause a patient. The argument is made that with enough medicine, there is no suck thing as “unbearable pain”, that with enough pain killers, the patient won’t feel a thing.  Not only does this method of dealing with the pain become very expensive, it can create a loss of dignity.  When a patient is being kept alive by heavy doses of medicine, they lose their sense of independence.  The patient becomes confined to a hospital bed, their only outside contact is those who come to visit them. They can begin to feel like a burden to their loved ones, knowing that, even though it sounds terrible, their death would ease a large amount of stress from their families shoulders. all of these struggles causes the patient to want their lives to come to an end.

Work Cited

Guy, Maytal. “The Desire for Death in the Setting of Terminal Illness: A Case Discussion.” NCIB.gov. Primary Care Companion, 12 Feb. 2006. Web. 5 Apr. 2015.

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Causal Argument- bglunk

The push and pull between happiness and meaning and which is more fulfilling can be debated back and forth but when it comes down to it there is cause and effect to each scenario. Superficial aspects tend to be associated with happiness without meaning, therefore superficial results in despair. Devotion and commitment are related to meaning and how ones life takes on a deeper role when happiness is gained through meaning. This is why commitment and devotion result in happiness.

Superficial aspect result in despair. Desperation is not a good way to live ones life. When someone yearns for something they can not receive or will not receive this is portrayed as desperation. As stated in previous papers the Real Housewives of Atlanta are a perfect example of showing women who yearn for unnecessary, materialistic items to try to gain happiness.Their superficial pursuit results in a race for who can have the most and who can gain it the quickest.The cause in this demonstration, to gain “happiness” through the newest and best objects money can buy. The effect is a life that is unfulfilling due to the constant disappointment that maybe the best of everything is unattainable.

Devotion and commitment are related to meaning in ones life. Dedication to someone or something can go a long way in ones life and bring prosperous results along with it. When a person  is committed to something the strive makes the task worth something. It transforms from just a meaningless act to something that was worked at, achieved, and finally earned. When a person is devoted to a cause the meaning makes the happiness worth something much greater then objects or material items.

Works Cited

http://www.overcomingbias.com/2013/07/happiness-vs-meaning.html

http://aeon.co/magazine/psychology/do-you-want-a-meaningful-life-or-a-happy-one/

Grewal. “A Happy Life May Not Be a Meaningful Life.” Scientific American Global RSS. N.p., 2014. Web. 01 Mar. 2015.

“Happiness.” PBS. PBS, n.d. Web. 19 Feb. 2015.

” Http://search.proquest.com/docview/1534304114?pq-origsite=summon. N.p., 8 June 2014. Web. Feb. 2015.
Smith, Emily Esfahani. “Meaning Is Healthier Than Happiness.” The Atlantic. Atlantic Media Company, 01 Aug. 2013. Web. 03 Mar. 2015

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Causal Rewrite-sallcomp2

How Apple “Won its Consumers’ Heart”

Apple Inc.’s main business model isn’t selling technology; it’s selling a lifestyle. Their massive success is mainly centered on brand loyalty and ecosystem, the corporation has developed for its consumers.

Apple Inc. introduction of the touch screen in mainstream technology for multipurpose use was a great idea to fulfill the consumer needs and assuring brand loyalty. Apple came up with iPhone when the consumers were tired of seeing the usual and something daring was asked by the baby-boomers. The baby-boomers were tired of the traditional mobile phones, typing ends up hurting the users fingers, the buttons becoming smaller;  therefore they wanted something new and never simple to use. The iPhone caused a great advance in technology. Just as the Macintosh made the use of computers very simple, the iPhone changed everything on not only how mobile phones are perceived, but also how we use them. The Millennial generation followed their parents which expended the Apple culture. Their ability to provide consumers something never seen before was a big risk Apple undertook, but the success of the innovation established an immense trust between the consumers and the company. Another factor that affects the buyer’s decision is the company ecosystem.

All Apple devices can connect through the clouds which is an excellent method to keep all of our document within reachable distance. It simulates the company’s goal of making its product user friendly and part of a one big family. It is a success and going on the right direction, because although we need a phone line to make calls, Mac, iPhone, iPad and iPod can send each other text messages, FaceTime Audio or Video with the help of the internet.

Apple inc. has done well on growing an excellent network of loyal consumers, and integrated them all in a one big group to help maintain present clients by giving them an ecosystem of people with the same interest, and made it easier for new consumers to figure out the use of their devices and the difference between others.

Work cited

Ahsanullah; Mahmood, A.K.B.; Sulaiman, S. “Investigation of fingertip blobs on optical multi-touch screen”,  Information Technology (ITSim), 2010 International Symposium in, On page(s): 1 – 6 Volume: 1, 15-17 June 2010 (New source}

Peterson, Geoff. “Apple Computer.” St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture. Ed. Thomas Riggs. 2nd ed. Vol. 1. Detroit: St. James Press, 2013. 122-124. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Web. 29 Mar. 2015.

Michael Obal, Werner Kunz, (2013) “Trust development in e‐services: a cohort analysis of Millennials and Baby Boomers”, Journal of Service Management, Vol. 24 Iss: 1, pp.45 – 63

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Causal Argument– mopar

Heroin use leads to crime.

When heroin controls your life it is hard to maintain a job to support your habit, so many heroin addicts turn to crime in order to get their heroin. When you get addicted to heroin you’ll do whatever you have to do to keep using which is usually committing crimes to get money. These addicts resort to stealing things to sell, robbing people, and even selling their bodies all to get their fix. In Vancouver the use of heroin is increasing and so are the crime rates. In an effort to reduce crime rates the heroin clinics offer free heroin to give the addicts a guaranteed fix. Giving free heroin to addicts takes away the need for them to commit crimes to get money. Without having to worry about getting heroin or committing a crime it opens the door for the addicts to get their lives back and get a real job instead of doing things like petty theft or prostitution.

Work Cited

“Drugs and Crime.” NCADD. N.p., n.d. Web. 05 Apr. 2015. https://ncadd.org/learn-about-drugs/drugs-and-crime

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Causal Argument–Thegreatestpenn

“Assuming what makes us Happy”

Day after day, psychologists are coming up with new and improved ways to check if we are happy, and to see if we are.  An article published by Jamie Hale claims that people rarely know what it is that makes them happy.  External events don’t cause happiness.  Positive external events in large numbers do.  Gives people an overall feeling of happiness.  This is difficult to argue because happiness is all relative.  Who’s to say that material possessions and events don’t make us happy?  There is no formula for happiness and if you force the feeling, it’s likely to have the opposite effect.  Happiness must come naturally in order for it to truly be achieved.

 

Works Cited

Hale, Jaime. “What Makes Us Happy?” Psych Central. Psych Central, n.d. Web. 05 Apr. 2015.

 

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A09: Causal Argument — sky-blue

How Elephants Become Robots

There are many obvious causes that explain why elephants are considered a main attraction in circuses, and continue to be to this day. These causes then relay the effects of elephants being beaten brutally in order to remain on top of the circus hierarchy.

For starters, as children we can not wait to go see the elephants because they are beautiful gigantic creatures that naturally entice the us to come see them in the shows. The high demand of the public to see elephants forces the trainers to continuously beat the elephants in order to continue the demand. An advocate for getting elephants out of circuses Matthew Wittmann says, “they’ve been fighting this fight for so long, and for over a century the icon of the American circus was the elephant” (Pèrez-Peña 2015). Us going to the circuses and paying the money that we do effects the elephants well being because they are being continuously beaten. If we did not have such a high demand to see elephants perform there would be no need to abuse them.

If we knew the immense cruelty that goes into breaking an elephant, most of us would be shamed away from circuses all together. Today, we are starting to realize the cruelty that is placed upon these beautiful animals and that effects the circus industry. Ingrid Newkirk, president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, commented on the removal of elephants and stated, “These are complex, intelligent animals, and this is a lousy, lousy, dirty, cruel business, and people see that” (Pèrez-Peña 2015). The circus and their harmful training tactics ended up hurting themselves because now their main attraction will be gone in just a few short years.

Another cause and effect that relates to elephants is how they are trained. Due to the fact that elephants are naturally wild gigantic animals that could pummel the trainers if given the chance the circus owners are forced to break them. The immense size of the elephants forces the trainers to use negative abusive tactics to train the elephants, a simple “good job” will not do the trick. The elephants are beaten with bullhooks, their legs bound, and kept in confinement to stray them from their natural instincts. This process results in elephants that are not elephants anymore. They become robots with routines drilled into their minds for each show.

By the decision to yank elephants from all circuses by 2018, Ringling Bros. is attempting to avoid outrage from the people and possible criminal proceedings. We hope that in the future circuses without elephants we are invited to see the real entertainment showcasing the natural beauty of these amazing animals.

Works Cited

Pèrez-peña, Richard. “Elephants to Retire From Ringling Brothers Stage.” The New York Times. The New York Times, 5 Mar. 2015. Web. 6 Apr. 2015. <http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/06/us/ringling-brothers-circus-dropping-elephants-from-act.html?_r=0&gt;.

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Causal Argument – CptPooStain

Throughout this essay it is explained that massive collaboration has always been and always will be a major crutch for all of humanity. In the example of Kufu’s Pyramid it is observed that the work force that finished the pyramid were a select group of oppressed slaves. Among them are those not healthy enough for work, or too old even. To add on to that they were oppressed, meaning the only incentive for the workers is the promised freedom they would receive upon completion. Unfortunately their only freedom would ultimately be death. If 100,000 oppressed slaves could complete numerous and monuments Pyramids, what do you suppose 100,000 or even 100 million highly motivated workers could accomplish?

Another work of massive collaboration which could be easily summed up is the Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union which was essentially all of 1957 to 1975.  An accurate date to mark the start of said race is the day the first artificial satellite was successfully launched into our orbit, October 4th 1957.  The satellite that is Sputnik, and that was launched by the Soviet Union. A lot of emotions were ushered in with this launch. among them were: excitement, fear, anxiety, and stress. Prior to this, World War II had recently concluded and brought upon us the Nuclear Arms Race. This race resulted in a lot of political drama and sanctions, and put nearly every nation on the brink of war. It also led to the realization of the concept of Mutually Assured Destruction (later known as MAD). Basically, everyone at this point has manufactured nuclear weapons, so if one power nukes another, there will be a nuclear retaliation which would only lead to both the attacker and their opponent completely demolished. In essence it was a stalemate. After ICBMs (Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles) were constructed to deliver the nuclear payloads, the world powers basically sat on their missile stockpile and said “Well… now what?”. That’s when the space race began. If a nation can’t control the land, they could surely control the skies.

Works Cited:

Mieczkowski, Yanek. “Eisenhower’s Sputnik Moment : The Race for Space and World Prestige.” <http://site.ebrary.com/lib/rowan/reader.action?docID=10656287 >Ebrary ProQuest Reader. Cornell University Press, 1 Feb. 2013. Web. 6 Apr. 2015.

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Casual Argument – juggler

“There’s No One Explanation for Inaccurate Eyewitness Testimony”

According to the Innocence Project eyewitness misidentification is the single greatest cause of wrongful conviction nationwide, playing a role in 75% of convictions overturned through DNA testing.  Yet eyewitness testimony is regarded as persuasive evidence by judges and juries.  In about 30% of DNA exoneration cases, innocent defendants made incriminating statements, delivered outright confessions, or pled guilty.  One can make a compelling argument that our legal system falls short on delivering justice. Most people trust what they see with their own eyes above all else. For the same reason they put great weight on eyewitness testimony.   We all point to the legal system, which often convicts people of crimes based largely on an eyewitnesses saying “I was at the scene and I absolutely saw the accused commit the crime.”

What more do you want? The person was there, he/she saw who did it, and unless he’s a proven liar the case is closed, not the case.  The problem of eyewitness unreliability (and memory unreliability) has been known in academia for years; psychologist have long documented how sincere, honest people make important mistakes when reporting what they saw. But it’s only recently that the legal system has recognized the issues and taken steps to mitigate the problem of eyewitness misidentification.

In fact, the New Jersey Supreme Court recently issued new rules to prevent innocent people from being wrongly convicted of a crime based upon eyewitness testimony. According to an article in The New York Times,

The New Jersey Supreme Court, acknowledging a “troubling lack of reliability in eyewitness identifications,” issued sweeping new rules… making it easier for defendants to challenge such evidence in criminal cases. The court said that whenever a defendant presents evidence that a witness’s identification of a suspect was influenced, by the police, for instance, a judge must hold a hearing to consider a broad range of issues. These could include police behavior, but also factors like lighting, the time that had elapsed since the crime or whether the victim felt stress at the time of the identification.

The chief justice, Stuart J. Rabner, wrote in a unanimous decision that the legal system had to catch up with scientific evidence in order to ensure justice. Study after study revealed a troubling lack of reliability in eyewitness identifications.   From the review of actual police lineups, laboratory experiments to DNA exonerations, the record proves that the possibility of mistaken identification is real.  Indeed, it is now widely known that eyewitness misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful convictions across the country.

By some estimates, as many as one-third of eyewitness identifications in criminal cases are wrong, and nearly 200 people who were convicted of crimes based on positive eyewitness identifications were later exonerated through DNA evidence.

A few of the mentioned cases below were started by mistaken eyewitnesses.

  • When Elizabeth Smart was abducted from her Salt Lake City home in 2002, Elizabeth’s sister, Mary-Katherine, watched the abduction while pretending to be asleep, and told the police that the abductor was “about 30 or 40 years old, wearing light-colored clothes and a golf hat.” Actually, Smart’s abductor, Brian David Mitchell, was wearing black (not white), was nearly 50 (not 30 or 40), and was not wearing a golf hat.
  • In 2009, six-year-old Falcon Heene caused a national outcry when his father said he’d been accidentally launched into the skies over Colorado in a homemade balloon. Police weren’t sure what to make of the case, whether it was a hoax or a mistake, but what convinced them to take the case seriously was the eyewitness account of Falcon’s brother Brad. According to Sheriff Jim Alderman, “He said he saw his brother climb into that apparatus and he was very adamant, they interviewed him multiple times and that was his consistent story.” It turned out to be a hoax; the eyewitness was wrong (or he lied).

The research also has implications for other types of eyewitness reports. For example people often report seeing things for which there is little or no hard evidence, such as Bigfoot, UFOs, and ghosts. The bulk of evidence for such “unexplained” reports are eyewitness accounts. Many people who believe in the existence of Bigfoot or extraterrestrials, for example, do so based on the faulty premise that sincere, honest eyewitnesses couldn’t be mistaken.

People like to believe that they accurately experience, remember, and understand what they see and hear. We all like to think that we are accurate and observant. Yet the cold hard evidence tells us otherwise; we can all be fooled, every one of us, and if you don’t think you can be fooled, you have already fooled yourself.

Eyewitness testimony may be questioned on three scientific grounds. First, visibility conditions may be poor, low light, poor weather.  Secondly, many studies report that even under good visibility, humans are poor at facial identification. Third, the procedures used to obtain the identification may be biased.

Jurors treat eyewitness identification as compelling evidence in all trials. The strength of eyewitness testimony is demonstrated by a study (cited in Loftus and Doyle, 1992) that recorded verdicts in a mock trial. Two separate sets of the jurors heard evidence differing only by the presence or absence of an eyewitness. With no eyewitness, only 18% of jurors gave guilty verdicts. Addition of an eyewitness identification increased the proportion of guilty verdicts to 72%. Even when the identification was impeached, the guilty rate was still 68%.  Several other studies have similarly found that juries tend to base their decision on a confident eyewitness identification even when other factors question its validity.

Although jurors rely heavily on eyewitness identification, there is overwhelming evidence that eyewitness identification is highly fallible and that eyewitness confidence is a poor guide to accuracy. I would like to share a few examples I found during my research.

  • A recent study (Wells, et al, 1998) examined the first 40 cases where DNA exonerated wrongfully convicted people. In 90% of the cases, mistaken eyewitness identification played a major role. In one case, 5 separate witnesses identified the defendant.
  • Huff (1987) studied 500 wrongful convictions and concluded that mistaken eyewitness identification occurred in 60%. This is an amazingly high number since eyewitness identification is an important factor in only 5% of all trials (Loh, 1981).
  • Cutler and Penrod (1995) examined eyewitness identification accuracy from controlled studies performed in “natural settings.” In the typical study, a person enters a convenience store and performs some memorable action (such as paying in change) to ensure drawing the clerk’s attention. Later the clerk views a photo spread and identifies the “customer.” The percentage of correct identification ranged from 34-48% and the percentage of false identification is 34-38%. It is hard to know how far to generalize such studies, but they suggest that eyewitnesses are almost as likely to wrong as to be correct when identifying strangers. These results occurred until highly favorable circumstances: extended duration, good lighting, clear visibility, and no “weapons focus.”

Why is mistaken identity so common?

  • One, the witness is often not told explicitly that the criminal’s picture might not be among the alternatives.

Eyewitness research has repeatedly found that identification is a relative, not an absolute judgment.   The witness does not compare each picture to memory, making a series of independent yes or no decisions. Instead, the eyewitness looks at all the pictures and then picks the one most likely to be the criminal.

There are several consequences of this decision strategy. One is that the witness is highly likely to make a “false alarm,” pick a picture even if the criminal is not in the group, even when unsure. An eyewitness probably starts with the assumption that the criminal must be among the alternatives. Why else would the police bother with the photo spread or line-up? The likelihood of false identification increases when the police put pressure on the witness to make an identification.  Anything which causes a witness to expect that the criminal is present in the group (e. g., police say “we think we have our man”) will increase false alarm rate.

Many studies show that explicitly telling the witness that the criminal may not be in the line-up greatly reduces false identifications while have little effect on correct ones. The result is much higher overall accuracy. The identification examiner should always inform the eyewitness that the criminal might not be present. In fact, the person calling the eyewitness to set up the line-up/photo-identification should also say that the criminal might not be present.

  • Secondly, the “stand-ins” are poorly chosen.  Since the eyewitness chooses the “best picture” relative to the others, it is important that the suspect not stand out from the “stand-ins” due to different height, weight, coloring, clothes, behavior, etc. In photo spreads, there are numerous ways that one picture can be subtly different: lighting, color tone, brightness, sharpness, viewing angle, background, location of face in the frame, and so on.

People who constructed the identification procedure will likely say that the stand-ins were similar to the suspect, but they seldom present any objective evidence to support their allegation. The only real way to be sure is to test “inexperience observers,” people not present at the crime with the same alternatives. In a photo spread, for example, inexperienced observers would view the same pictures and then make a choice. In a fair test, they should pick pictures at random, since they cannot use memory to select.   If there is something innately suggestive or distinctive about a suspect’s picture, it may be chosen at a rate above chance. Such a result would seriously question the photo spread’s validity. Attorneys who have any doubts about the fairness of the other stand-ins in a photo spread should have an experimental psychologist design and conduct an unbiased test.

It would be more difficult to re-test a line-up, since the stand-ins may not be available or wearing the same clothes. In addition, there is no guarantee that they will behave the same way as during the identification. It should be remembered, however, that a line-up following a photo-identification is not an independent event. If someone identifies a suspect in the photo spread, the witness will almost certainly identify the same person in the line-up, for consistency’s sake. Who would want to appear a fool by picking a different person from photo and from a live group? The line-up would be, at best, not a comparison of people vs. memory but rather of people vs previously seen photographs. In fact, eyewitnesses have strong tendency to stay with initial identifications even when they are later proved incorrect. Therefore calling a photo-identification into question automatically raises doubts about any subsequent line-up.

  • Third, the person conducting the photo spread/line-up knew who the suspect was. There are two reasons that neither the person conducting the line-up/photo-identification nor anyone else in the room know who the suspect is. There is a possibility that he/she will intentionally or unintentionally signal this expectation. The signal need not be blatant as even subtle changes in body posture can be enough to tip-off the witness. For example, a slight lean forward while the eyewitness views a picture can be enough to draw a big red circle around it.

The tendency to signal expectations is so pervasive that drug and other important scientific studies are rejected without a “double-blind” procedure, one where neither the subject nor the experimenter knows the expected outcome. Similarly, courts now generally require that surveys conducted to support litigation in intellectual property cases be performed by questioners who have no knowledge of the desired outcome or even of the issues in dispute. It is ironic that criminal courts, where there can be much more at stake, freely permit introduction of such potentially biased evidence as identifications conducted without double-blind procedures.

There is a corollary to the necessity of double-blind procedures: the witness must be told that the examiner has no idea who the suspect is. Otherwise, the eyewitness might look for a sign of confirmation, real or imagined. Some personality types constantly seek approval from authority figures, such as the police. They are likely to seek affirmation in feedback from the examiner.

The examiner can easily influence witness confidence after the choice. If the examiner says “good” or “um hmm,” after the choice, the eyewitness will feel more confident and likely later express a stronger belief in his/her accuracy. This can be crucial because juries look at not just the identification, but also at the witness’s certainty. In fact, one study found that witness confidence is about the only aspect of an identification that jurors consider (Cutler, et al, 1990). This is probably one of the reasons the correlation between eyewitness confidence and accuracy is low (Bothwell, et. al, 1987)

Although eyewitness identification is highly fallible, it still carries great weight with jurors. There are some situations where identification is more likely accurate. For example, if the suspect is someone previously known to the victim, then high accuracy is more probable. When it comes to strangers, however, identifications are frequently in error. Lastly, eyewitness confidence provides only modest assurance that the identification is correct.

Why is it the more we remember an event the less reliable the recollection is?

Memory tends to distort perception in systematic ways. For example, people tend to remember colors as being brighter and more saturated than they actually were. Other studies show that people who are asked to recall vehicle speeds tend to overestimate slow speeds and to underestimate fast ones. Additional studies show systematic biases in remembering distance and size.

Human memory does not exist so that an observer may accurately report previously seen events. The actual, physical events are merely interpretation. Each witness extracts an interpretation that is meaningful in terms of his own beliefs, experiences and needs. Once the interpretation occurs, the events themselves become relatively unimportant. Since each person interprets events in terms of his/her own world view, different eyewitnesses observing the same event may have different interpretations and different memories.

Eyewitness memories can be biased by the questions asked at the time of retrieval. Several famous studies have shown that the question can supply information that the eyewitness will incorporate into the answer. The question can easily supply information that helps fill in gaps in the respondent’s memory.

Memory Changes over time and with retelling. Eyewitnesses incorporate information learned after the event into memory. For example, they may talk to another witness and use information from the conversation to fill in their reconstruction of the events. They may do this by combining two memories into one or by using bias or expectations of what probably was seen.

As people recall an event over and over, they drop details from earlier versions and add new details to later versions. All things being equal, accuracy declines with each new version, at least until an asymptote is reached. In some cases, however, an eyewitness accuracy is lower when questioned immediately after a traumatic event.

In conclusion, enhancing new techniques to increase the reliability of eyewitness testimony are important to reliable eyewitness testimony. Scientific studies, academia studies have shown many ways we can believe an eyewitness. Eyewitness testimony will never be 100% accurate until we master the memory, and that is not going to happen in anyone’s life time. Memory is fascinating, intriguing, mystifying and most of all memory is complicated.  In order to improve eyewitness testimony we need to analyze the procedural guidelines. Police line-ups, how questions are being asked, consider the conditions and circumstances; do not allow prosecutors and police officers coerce the witnesses.

Work Cited

“Eyewitnesses: Why They Can’t Be Trusted : DNews.” DNews. N.p., n.d. Web. 05 Apr. 2015. <http://news.discovery.com/human/psychology/nj-supreme-court-revises-eyewitness-id-rules.htm&gt;.

“Advertisement.” Is Eyewitness Testimony Inherently Unreliable? N.p., n.d. Web. 05 Apr. 2015. <http://apps.americanbar.org/litigation/committees/trialevidence/articles/winterspring2012-0512-eyewitness-testimony-unreliable.html&gt;.

N.p., n.d. Web. <https%253A%252F%252Fhealthymemory.wordpress.com%252F2015%252F03%252F08%252Ffalse-memories-leading-to-confessions%252F>.

N.p., n.d. Web. <http%3A%2F%2Fwww.vihttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2F2011%2F09%2F20%2Fopinion%2Fwexler-witness-memory-davis%2Findex.htmlsualexpert.com%2FResources%2Fmistakenid.html>.

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Agenda WED APR 01

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A09: Causal Argument

Helmets Prevent Injury
(by Preventing Biking)

Your third short argument is due SUN APR 05 at midnight. It will make an argument essential to your Research Position Paper, which will be due FRI DEC 04. , a week after your last Rewrite assignment, which will be due on SUN APR 19. This sounds like a substantial amount of work over the next few weeks, but actually, it’s just a clever way to get you to finish a large portion of your Research Position Paper before the ultimate deadline.

I would not be surprised if you can use virtually all of your causation argument in your final paper to very good effect. So, try to think of Sunday’s deadline as a chance to finish your final paper early.

This Causal Argument Essay will identify one or more cause-and-effect relationships essential to proving your thesis. We’ll talk today about the most likely causal arguments in each of your papers. Until now, you may not have thought of your particular paper as having much to do with causation, but by the end of the class I hope you’ll each have a good idea how to approach this project.

Causation Basics

We make causation statements all the time, without necessarily realizing that we’re engaged in argument and proof.
1) The Sixers lost because they didn’t rebound and turned the ball over too often
–Lack of possession caused the loss
2) His parents’ divorce made it difficult for Charles to form lasting relationships
–Early childhood trauma caused Charles’s three divorces
3) A dispute over abortion prevented the government from passing a budget
–A small detail kept a huge compromise from being finalized

Types of Causation Statements
Causation is complicated because life and the world are complex webs of interconnected activities all with consequences. Rarely does a single cause yield just one effect. Your job in writing causal arguments will often be to identify the most important of the several causes for one effect (or the several effects of a single cause).
1) Immediate Cause
–Deep philosophical differences between Republicans and Democrats caused the US Congress to have difficulty passing a budget last week. But tiny matters like the funding of a few abortions can be cited as the Immediate Cause of the last-minute budget crisis. So an immediate cause and a persistent conflict combine to create an episodic effect.
2) Remote Cause
–It’s been decades since Charles’s parents divorced, but the lingering effects of that childhood trauma do bedevil his relationships with women to this day. The immediate cause of his third divorce is that he visits hookers, but he blames the remote cause instead when he talks to his therapist.
3) Precipitating Cause
–Very similar to the immediate cause, the precipitating cause is the sudden change that allows an underlying cause to have its way with objects or events. We should say gravity caused the car to roll downhill into the bay, but we’ll probably say instead it was the failure of the brakes.
4) Contributing Cause
–The Sixers don’t have the skilled players to match up against the Celtics most nights, and that’s always the underlying cause for their losing when they do, but on this particular night, the turnovers and bad rebounding contributed to the skill mismatch to cause a loss.

Other Complications

Considering how many causes are usually in play to achieve any individual result, you’re not responsible to prove causation beyond a shadow of a doubt. Your demonstration of a likely cause, with evidence and reason, will suffice. Your “proof” will yield a probable cause, not a certain conclusion. That said, you will need to defend against oversimplification and false causation. Because they often occur together, correlations mimic causations; you never want to make the mistake of claiming that breakfast causes lunch.

Correlation as False Causation
Here’s a case study from Freakonomics. Annie does well in school because?:
–Annie always brings her lunch in a brown bag
–Annie gets nothing but support for good scholastic performance
–Annie’s parents are both brilliant
–Annie’s parents don’t let her watch much television
–Annie’s house is full of books
–Annie was born after a full 9-month gestation

  • TV (NO) It turns out television viewing has little predictable correlation with strong academic performance, so even if both exist in Annie’s case, neither is likely to cause the other.
  • Books (NO) House full of books? Not so much.
  • Parents’ IQ (YES) The IQ of parents does have a causal effect,
  • Birth Weight (YES) and so does low birth weight.
  • Lunch (NO) Bringing your own lunch? None at all.
  • The most important correlation of all, and probably causative, is a full-term pregnancy, also connected to regular birth weight.

The rules here are fuzzy, but the best refutation for your strongest argument is often that you’ve only demonstrated a correlation, not causation. Yes, most heroin addicts have smoked marijuana, but an even larger percentage of them drank soft drinks as a kid. Which one is causal?

What I Think
You’re under no obligation to accept my thesis recommendations, but after thinking about your research topics, I believe you might find it fruitful to ask the following questions or consider the following theories for your papers.

Albert
Not long ago, people born in the Dominican Republic were thereby Dominican citizens. A recent law, though, declares that no matter where they are born, children of Dominican parents—and no others— are Dominican citizens. The consequence of this law is that thousands of DR residents, who were formerly considered citizens, are no longer, and that children born now and in the future to Haitian parents will not be citizens of the Dominican Republic. Such a change has dramatic consequences for “former” citizens who are stripped of their citizenship. Albert can concentrate on the consequences of the change, or its causes, or both. If the law was effective in accomplishing certain outcomes, those outcomes will explain the reason for the law. The most obvious outcome is that thousands of DR residents are deprived the benefits of citizenship. A similar new law is often proposed in the United States by groups that believe we attract illegal immigrants by granting citizenship to children born here illegally. Those groups wish to deprive the newborn residents the benefits of citizenship. Examining the parallel between the DR and the US might be very fruitful for Albert.

Betterthanyou
Has not provided enough content to be helped.

Bglunk
Bglunk is making arguments on both sides of the debate about whether happiness can or cannot be pursued. Clearly some people are happy; others are not; the question is what makes them so. Most commonly, the argument is made that a superficial life of selfish devotion to immediate gratification is ultimately unfulfilling, whereas a life devoted to the selfless pursuit of a long term greater good not only results in happiness, but actually defines what it means to be happy. The Pursuit itself gives life the meaning that is the closest humans can come to happiness. The whole argument is cause-and-effect. Superficial results in despair; devoted commitment results in happiness, it says. Explaining why the formula is true would be the harder part for bglunk. Perhaps humans can’t ever be truly satisfied. If we accept that as a premise, satisfaction is a pointless and desperate goal. The cast of the Housewives of Atlanta should be satisfied, but they spend their agitated lives comparing what they have to what they should have. They’ll never be the world’s richest and most beautiful person, so they’re miserable. The only happy humans are those who don’t strive for perfection; they only strive to improve, to contribute, to do their best. They pursue something, and the pursuit is their happiness.

brettb / Entendu / taddo / hashmeesh / mopar 
Brettb is writing about Vancouver’s free heroin for addicts program. It’s unclear what the definition essay defines, and there’s no rebuttal essay yet to clarify the developing thesis, but the obvious contradiction in the very premise of providing free heroin to citizens is that the government has a clear policy of discouraging drug use (a War on Drugs, if you will), that does not seem well served by actively injecting local residents with powerful opiates. That contradiction disappears, though, if brettb considers the situation from a different set of causes and effects. Most Vancouver residents don’t care that their neighbors use heroin. If addicts can afford the stuff, and use it at home, and don’t bother the neighbors, they don’t care. The government gets involved when the addicts can’t afford the stuff, and use it in public, and break into the neighbors’ houses to steal stuff, and furthermore clog up the emergency rooms when they get sick from overdoses and dirty shared needles. What effect does the government really want to accomplish? Not the drug use, necessarily; it’s the public nuisance and expense they wish to eliminate. If giving drugs to addicts in clean needles reduces theft and robbery, and keeps the addicts out of the hospital, the program is cheaper than the alternative. Cause, Effect.

CasperTheGhost
Casper has gone to lengths to distinguish between euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide but without investigating the cause/effect difference. Perhaps it seems obvious: the effect in both cases is patient death. But that’s not true. Physician-assisted suicide places death in the hands of the patient, who leaves the office with pills that will bring about a swift and painless death whenever the patient elects to take them. The surprising result is that not everybody who has gone to considerable trouble to obtain these precious life-ending prescriptions eventually takes them. That crucial difference could be explained by a better understanding of what the pills were meant to accomplish. Were they acquired as a weapon to hasten death? Or did the patients who received them want something else: the power to decide? We must all feel quite helpless when we see our deaths coming. Suppose all we really need is something to balance that helpless feeling, as if death were the boss we hate, and who doesn’t much care for us either. It may be small comfort, but comforting nonetheless, to know that we can always quit before he fires us.

CptPooStain
The Captain offers us a chance to contemplate the enormous engineering projects that can be accomplished by a massive collaboration of small human efforts. The cause and effect combination is pretty obvious. Millions (eventually billions) of people perform small tasks that, taken together, accomplish an unimaginably large job, like translating every page of wikipedia into a majority of the world’s 6000 human languages (or into enough languages that a large majority of the world’s people can understand them). Constructing the pyramids, landing men on the moon, required massive collaboration. What I hope the Captain will investigate is what will cause billions of people to contribute their small efforts. Will compulsion, competition, or compensation give way to some other motivator? Slaves were compelled to build the pyramids; thousands of Americans put a rocket on the moon to beat the Russians; millions now are helping to translate the web in exchange for free language instruction. The most compelling feature of this topic for me is what will cause the humans of the future to contribute to the big projects.

Cypher
Cypher’s entire project appears to be an effort to prove that technology has made humans stupid and weak, sort of. The actual consequences are not specifically stated (which makes them easier to declare). According to cypher, because of electricity, our physical ability, work ethic, and decisiveness have been “degraded.” As an illustration, cypher suggests that we are weaker because of elevators, as if before they were invented, we all climbed stairs to the 25th floors of our office buildings. While it’s true we don’t chop a lot of firewood now, was there a time when all of us chopped firewood? Apparently also we no longer innovate or think hard because we’re given calculators, which seems to argue in turn that there’s something innovative about following the rules of long division. The theory that we’re weakened by technology is certainly tempting, but a closer examination of what exactly is lost would be more enlightening. Could we build the pyramids today? Of course we could. Could we do it by sheer force of manual labor? Yes. Could we also accomplish the same task with a lot less physical exertion? Yes. Could the ancient Egyptians have sent a satellite to circle certain stars? No. Does the clerk at Wawa understand why I give him $11.14 for a $6.64 purchase? Probably not. Does he give me the correct change anyway? Yes. Certainly some modern skills and abilities do not align with those of old. Deciding whether that’s a loss or a realignment will make a good essay.

mopar / brettb / Entendu / taddo / hashmeesh / 
Like brettb, mopar is writing about Vancouver’s free heroin for addicts program. Unlike brettb, mopar appears to argue that the desired consequence of the program is to improve the lives of the addicts. Mopar’s argument in the definition essay pits those who consider “harm reduction” to be a worthy goal against those who characterize the program as “kind death.” Both sides work from the premise that the addiction cannot be cured, and both acknowledge that the result of the program is likely the same: longer, healthier life that ends in an opportunistic death. What sounds like an argument is actually agreement. They disagree in just one way: one side says we’re doing as much as we can; the other side says you’re not doing as much as you could. It would be helpful to compare the outcomes each of these groups desires and the procedures they believe would result in those outcomes. At the same time, the actual outcomes of all previous attempts to “solve the drug problem” could also be compared with the results of Vancouver’s current experiment. While it’s always possible to “do more,” it may well be that Vancouver (along with other jurisdictions) has found a way to achieve multiple desired effects by eliminating several causes at the same time.

Entendu / mopar / brettb / taddo / hashmeesh 
Entendu has not provided enough content to be helped personally, but may benefit from advice offered to others working on the same topic.

hashmeesh / Entendu / mopar / brettb / taddo / 
Hashmeesh is the third (alphabetically) student working the same Vancouver story. I will trust all five to read the comments I’ve made to those whose names precede them in the alphabet.

juggler
juggler has addressed a large amount of cause and effect material in a definition essay that identifies what causes us to produce memories that differ from factual reality. The explanations of several types of variables that act on our perceptions to produce deviant memories are all causal, but they merely indicate that such variables exist without describing how they operate, which means there’s plenty of work left for a good causal argument. A good causal argument could be made about the results of erroneous eyewitness testimony, but I’m hoping juggler will instead explain how the testimony comes to be erroneous in the first place. Are witnesses lying?; are they influenced by their prejudices?; do prosecutors coerce them?; does the investigative process urge them to draw certain conclusions about what they’ve seen? One paragraph of the definition essay claims that the more often we remember an event the less reliable our recollections. But what is the remedy for that? Not remembering it? Or are we forced to deal with the inevitability of memory decay? Presumably a statement made immediately after the witnessing would be the most reliable memory. So, does what we learn afterwards alter our memory? Or can we be influenced by the opinions of other witnesses? All of these are rich causal topics I’d like to see discussed.

kidhanekoma
kidhanekoma has not produced enough content to be helped.

madewithrealginger
Most of ginger’s definition essay claims are causal. Bitcoin solves the problems of other currencies; it will dominate the economy of the future; it will alter our perception of the very nature of currency; it will usher in an age of money not tethered to any national or international government (that last one is mine). So far, there has been no mention of the causes of Bitcoin, so I presume ginger has no interest in why its inventor(s) launched it. That’s OK by me, but if those “problems” Bitcoin is meant to solve are the cause of its origin, we might want to know about them. In fact, it would be hard to describe the solutions (the effects) without addressing the problems (the causes). OR. It’s possible Bitcoin’s inventors wanted only to make money, literally and figuratively. Insofar as they’ve made the money valuable, they can make as much of it as they like. Something is motivating millions of enthusiasts to invest other currencies and real tangible property into a very speculative commodity. Maybe that’s the best angle for cause and effect. From what little I’ve seen of ginger’s thinking, it’s too soon for me to tell. But there are certainly plenty of opportunities in this topic.

moneytrees
Contraindications for Multivitamins. Well, they’re useless, it seems. They don’t promote heart health, mitigate cognitive decline, or prolong our lives. Moneytrees’ apparent cause/effect argument is that we have somehow been convinced to buy and consume a useless product. What caused this persistent error? Well, for one thing, they can plug nutritional gaps for those whose diets don’t provide everything essential. But according to moneytrees, those gaps are few and mostly predictable, so they could be plugged by adding iodine or iron to the diets of specific populations. My guess is that they’re simply convenient for people who don’t know what their diet lacks and who consider the investment of a few cents a day to be an affordable way to insure their daily requirements are met. For my money, the more compelling argument would explain the tactics the vitamin industry has used to sell the effectiveness of their products. They’ve convinced millions that their diets don’t provide their needs (which moneytrees claims is mostly untrue) and that their additional doses of what we already get from food somehow promote our health (also disputed by moneytrees). So, how did they do that? seems to me to be the most intriguing cause/effect question.

qdoba
Qdoba is writing about the Marshmallow Test, which by now we’re all familiar with from classroom discussions. In a rebuttal essay, qdoba took great pains to demonstrate that a particular individual named Dante Washington overcame his origins in a tough neighborhood to graduate college and buy his own home. The explanation qdoba offers is that Washington’s past “encouraged him and forced him to become” successful. Qdoba’s point appears to be that Washington’s early experience did not doom him to repeat the life of his parents and neighbors. He surpassed his origins. That anecdotally refutes the common knowledge that we are shaped and limited by our early environment, but it doesn’t appear to refute the Marshmallow Test, which doesn’t address environment at all, but instead concludes that children’s personalities are formed early and determine whether they will seek immediate gratification or long-term goals. We’d have to know about Washington’s early character to conclude anything about the Marshmallow test’s accuracy about him.

YouDontKnowWhoIAm
YDKWIA . . . copy to come

skyblue
Skyblue can choose from a variety of cause/effect topics. The question of how animals, primarily elephants, are handled in entertainment, primarily circuses, raises many causal concerns. First is how responsible the visitors are for the way the animals are treated. It could be argued that without paying customers there would be no circuses, hence no need to capture and train elephants, hence no elephant abuse. That causality would hold whether the visitors understood their part in the abuse or not. Now that the abuse is being made public, visitors will be shamed away, so the immediate cause of the awareness of elephant suffering is the shutting of circuses or the elimination of animal acts. Zoos have had to react too, so their public relations teams have launched campaigns to distinguish their handling techniques from those of circuses. They will position themselves as conservators, educators, protectors of elephants and other wild animals. OR skyblue could approach the topic of animal training from a cause and effect angle. What does it take to break an elephant? How well do positive and negative techniques succeed relatively? OR skyblue could concentrate on the effect of hunting elephants on their native populations. OR . . . .

sall
Sall’s hypothesis, that Apple products are successful more as fashion accessories than as superior technology is full of cause and effect claims. For starters, something about the first Apple products made them more desirable to a segment of the computer-buying public. Think of a causal chain here. Apple produces the Macintosh personal computer. It sports a graphical user interface that makes it much easier to use than IBM machines and their clones. Its different looks and attention to its own appearance endear it to artists, designers, and drones who aspired to being artists and designers. In other words, they were cool. That early success with a particular segment of the market compelled the company to drive further into its niche, and the widening gulf between Apple and IBM/Microsoft products became a turf war in which both consumer groups displayed fierce loyalty. Apple deliberately refused to run Microsoft programs even after Windows was released to mimic the interface features of Macs. To this day, the choice of one platform or another is as much a lifestyle statement as it is a decision based on functionality. All of that is driven by the single cause of wanting to capture the loyalty of a particular segment of a market.

taddo / Entendu / mopar / brettb / hashmeesh
taddo is the fifth (alphabetically) student working the same Vancouver story. I will trust all five to read the comments I’ve made to those whose names precede them in the alphabet.

tagf
Tagf is arguing that humans are subject to false memories. The definition essay for this project is more or less a summary of Carl Sagan’s formula for creating false memories as reported in a Scientific American article. Oddly, tagf submits as a rebuttal essay a convincing account of the ways humans come to accept photoshopped images of events even when they conflict with their own memories of those witnessed events. It shouldn’t be surprising that we will not insist our memories are perfect when we’re confronted with evidence that they are flawed. After all, we don’t pretend to remember in what order people were standing in a procession, to take a simple example. Instead, if we know something about the event, we apply logic to our memory. Bill had to be standing to Wayne’s left because he’s taller and the guests were arranged in height order. Unless we have that theoretical knowledge to convince us, a photo might easily convince us Wayne stood to the left.

thatdude
Thatdude . . . copy to come

thegreatestpenn
Thegreatestpenn . . . copy to come

Advice to an earlier class

Username
Username doesn’t actually make a thesis claim in her proposal, so it’s hard to tell what her causal arguments would be. I surmise that since she is heavily influenced by a video called “What Babies Learn in the Womb,” she must accept the premise that babies do in fact learn before they’re born. This might be difficult to prove, but some evidence could be helpful. If, for example, babies are born with a preference for certain tastes or food types, we could use that to prove that they “acquired” those tastes by ingesting those food types through the umbilical cord. The tests for these sorts of claims are very subjective and dubious, so Username will need good clinical studies to overcome our natural inclination to doubt that what mommies say about their very special infants is in fact factual.

Username
Username’s thesis is also unclear at this point, so she too will have to clarify it before she writes a good Causal argument. The topic is “Sleeping On It,” and the general premise seems to be that decisions made after a night of sleep are “better” than snap judgments. But even that is not clear. It’s possible that any sort of distraction (sleep or concentration on some other, unrelated issue) gives the unconscious mind a chance to deliberate on the problem with improved results. Either way, she’ll have to find a way to define “better decisions” in a way that truly convinces readers she can prove that anything produces them. If studies exist that control for distraction and non-distraction, sleep and not-sleep, we’ll still have to know what “better” is.

Username
Username’s topic is the hateful rhetoric of the Westboro Baptist Church and its recently deceased leader, Fred Phelps, the lovely people who bring us the GOD HATES FAGS protests outside the funerals of servicemen. His thesis, not clearly stated in his Proposal, is spelled out clearly in his Definition essay, that the rabid protests produce support for gay rights advocates. While it’s altogether persuasive to claim that sympathetic humans will rally to defend a vulnerable class as it’s being attacked, the harder proof will be to demonstrate that this sympathy translates into support or advocacy for the vulnerable group. In other words, does our revulsion against the WBC, our abhorrence for their tactics, our outrage at their terrible lack of decency and decorum, even our compassion for their victims last longer than a moment of pity? Once the church members depart the funeral and we calm down, do our open hearts translate into a desire for justice for the targets of that hate we witnessed? We might just rally AGAINST the WBC without rallying TO SUPPORT the gay Americans they condemn.

Username
Username is investigating something called “the paradox of choice,” which concludes that we are less, not more, satisfied when we’re given a wide range of options from which to choose. Her proposal makes a causal claim that she might be able to prove with enough evidence: that given a small number of choices, we accept that we’ll be compromising and are satisfied with an option that is good but not ideal; on the other hand, when presented with a plethora of options, we expect to find the perfect choice available and are therefore dissatisfied with the option we select because it’s not ideal. That’s more than enough argument for an essay the size we’re writing, but she hints that there are other explanations (other causes) too for our dissatisfaction: 1) the fear that we’re not knowledgeable enough to make the right choice, 2) the theory that we want to exercise SOME control over our decisions but not MUCH control, 3) the possibility that we’re paralyzed by trying to process too many choices and will make no choice at all just to avoid the exertion (and still end up dissatisfied because we wanted SOMETHING, not nothing). She may be able to structure her essay by claiming the paradox as a given, then arguing for the best, most logical explanation for its existence.

Username
Username paints his thesis with a very broad brush, so it’s hard to pin down anything specific enough to summarize in a sentence, but in general, he’s not in favor of the efforts of Toms Shoes to do good in developing countries. His objections are several, and he’ll need to get selective to write a good paper, but the one that provides the best angle for a good causation argument is that donating shoes to the kids in a community undermines the local economy, thus doing more harm than good. That’s a very strong and damning causal claim that deserves to be either proved or disproved. Saying it certainly does not make it so. Plenty of critics make this complaint, and they cite examples of wrongheaded relief efforts as evidence, but those proofs are not persuasive; they merely support our prejudices and suspicions. My best recommendation would be to refute the claims of damage done to local economies and provide contrary evidence that the recipient communities benefit more than suffer from the donations of shoes.

Username
Username proposes that an eating plan or diet known as IIFYM (If It Fits Your Macros) is superior to diets that severely restrict food choices because it permits its followers to eat whatever they like provided they meet their macronutrient (carb, fat, and protein) requirements for the day. The primary result is that dieters can stick to the diet. But as a secondary result, he claims IIFYM dieters are as healthy as, or healthier than, followers of other diets because the body doesn’t discriminate TYPES of food, just amounts of macronutrients. I suggest he choose one carb (sugar), one fat (butter), and one protein (milk), to test this theory. The most common food comprised of those three macronutrients is fudge. Needless to say, he’ll have a hard time arguing that a diet of fudge alone will result in overall health. He might use this illustration to demonstrate that while such a diet might control WEIGHT (depending on the quantities consumed), it certainly can’t promote overall HEALTH.

Username
Username’s thesis is already causal. He claims that we’re more at risk of dying or sustaining serious injury from a thousand little everyday activities than from the major or catastrophic traumas (plane crash, terror attack) we are more likely to worry about. That’s all cause-and-effect thinking. What he doesn’t do much of is investigate what we can DO about the fact that daily activities are so dangerous. Maybe he could write an essay called “How to Live Forever,” in which he suggests common solutions to the dangers of everyday life. Maybe grab bars in the shower are more effective at saving lives than staying out of race cars. Maybe the seat we choose in an airliner is more important than who runs that airline, or to what country we fly, or the experience of the pilot. After all, if we’re wrong about the likely causes of our deaths, maybe we should spend some time finding the most likely causes and eliminating them.

Username
Username makes a causal claim as part of a very broad thesis she’ll need to narrow to make a persuasive argument: America’s poor conspire in their own exploitation. In other words, their own actions cause them to be exploited. They vote for politicians who then abandon them and their interests (It’s not clear what choice they have here). They accept whatever wages and work conditions they’re offered (It’s not clear what choice they have here). They receive less and less support from social service agencies (It’s not clear that this is even an action of theirs). The challenge for Username, who has made a causal claim, will be to demonstrate that the opposite behavior would benefit the poor. (If they fail to vote, will someone champion their cause?) (If they refuse the work, will they benefit?) (If they stop seeking services, will more help come to them?) If she can’t find alternatives to break the causal chain, she’ll be left saying, “Hey, it’s like gravity. Things fall. What can you do?”

Username
Username’s analysis of the Monty Hall Problem is almost entirely causal. He’ll be arguing the counterintuitive thesis that game players improve their odds of finding a car behind one of three doors by changing their choice (a demonstrable causal effect) when they’re shown that one of two unchosen doors contains a goat. Intuition says there’s no benefit to switching. Logical reasoning proves that there is. Vinny’s challenge is not to find evidence of causation but to carefully explain it so that it can be comprehended and eventually embraced by a doubtful reader. Examples will be helpful; a chart is almost required.

Username
Usename wants to prove—contrary to our Declaration of Independence, which declares our right to “the pursuit of happiness” unalienable —that happiness is not a goal that can be pursued. Either that or they mean to prove that the pursuit of happiness can itself be happiness. Either that or they mean to prove that happiness is a process, not a goal, or that a “meaningful life” with a “sense of purpose” is preferable to “mere” happiness. Or something else. They might want to talk with Username about the Paradox of Choice. Maybe the harder we strive toward unattainable goals the more likely we are to feel deprived, the more like failures. That’s a simple, if fuzzy, cause/effect relationship that would explain most of the material they’ve been presenting so far.

Username
Username’s thesis is that we are deceived by the nature of the circus, which pretends to be a celebration of the amazing abilities of animals to cheerfully perform the feats they’ve proudly learned to delight us (that may be laying it on a bit thick), when in fact it’s a wanton display of the results of a life of torture for animals who have been whipped, starved, cattle-prodded and otherwise abused into submission. The “happiest show on earth” will come the day the animals revolt and slaughter their handlers. The maltreatment is easy to document and might not present much challenge. The cause and effect (besides that the torture—the cause—results in joyless performance—the effect) worth pursuing might be the effect of the show on its audience. We are taught several wrong lessons, aren’t we, Ben? That these massive beasts are “tamable”? That they somehow collaborate with us? That we have dominion over them? That they are our legitimate toys? That we are somehow preserving them by “rescuing” them from the terrible wild? Can you enumerate a dozen or so more?

Username
Suicide isn’t murder, it’s a senseless killing. Username’s thesis appears to be that suicide is entirely preventable. So the suicide is his effect, and the causes he will investigate in turn to demonstrate that they are all addressable. Eliminate the causes for suicide by first identifying and understanding them, and the effect will disappear. But before he gets started, he wants to assure us what suicide is not. Now either of these approaches might overwhelm a single paper; the combination is certainly too big for a short argument. Reading his descriptions of his sources, clearly he has more support for arguing what suicide is not. I would welcome such a paper. We Will Never Prevent Suicide Because We’re Wrong About What Causes It.

Username
PTSD is Contagious. Username has a bit of a problem because he devoted much of his Definition essay to explaining the causes of secondary PTSD. Here’s what I’d recommend to bring some vitality and personality into his research. Do a side-by-side accounting of the Traumas faced by Dad in combat and his Son back home when Dad returns. How much is living with Dad (his nightmares, his day terrors, his unprovoked anger, his bursts of violence, his paranoia, his hypervigilance, his menu of symptoms) like living in a combat zone? Take us as much as possible through the day of the spouse or child of that traumatized, shell-shocked loved one who won’t stop threatening the safety of the household but also won’t go away. Show us the causes so we’ll understand the effects.

Username
Protein Supplements are Dangerous and Unhealthy. Luke’s argument is strictly scientific, so his evidence will have to be scientific. He claims protein supplements are dangerous, but vague claims like “liver damage” aren’t persuasive to mildly demanding readers. Onions are supposedly “bad for” my dog, but until somebody makes an actual, responsible claim to distinguish “destroys liver function” from “gives the dog unpleasant breath,” I’m not inclined to deny him something he likes. “Build up of ketones” sounds impressive, but only if ketones are really dangerous. Username promises to provide “the good side” of supplements too, but this offer is irrelevant to the argument. He could deflect the good news in a phrase: “Except for consumers who don’t get enough natural protein in their diets, protein supplements are at best an expensive and worthless habit, at worst an inexcusable health risk.”

Username
Support for Child Euthanasia. Username makes two primary claims in his proposal, one causal and one ethical. Ethically, he argues that a patient’s age is irrelevant to end-of-life decisions. Causally, he proposes to refute someone else’s causal chain. Opponents of the law permitting children of any age to request and receive permission to hasten the end of their lives worry that removing the age restriction will result in a consensual massacre. They must think multitudes of children for whatever reason are only staying alive because they haven’t been given permission to kill themselves, haven’t been matched to a doctor willing to deliver them their desired demises. This objection is such a powerful visceral refutation of the rightness of Josue’s more compassionate position that once he counters it, the majority of his opponents will have to surrender. So his course is clear.

Username
Contraindications for Multivitamins. Well, they’re useless, expensive, and can kill us. Those are some serious contraindications. Username argument is scientific, so his evidence and his causal argument will be scientific. He doesn’t need to define vitamins; he needs to define vitamin overdose. He doesn’t need to define beneficial actions of vitamins on undernourished bodies; he needs to demonstrate the toxic effects of too many vitamins on well-nourished bodies. He will help himself too by illustrating how, to supplement low dietary vitamin B, for example, a multivitamin containing B might 1) not contain the right B to solve the problem, and furthermore 2) contain way too much of several other vitamins whose detrimental effects outweigh what would have been the benefits of taking the right single vitamin as a supplement.

Username
Username thinks men have been in charge of defining rape long enough. She devotes considerable space to enumerating some of the insane male attitudes toward rape that would be funny if they weren’t so frighteningly misinformed. While there are not necessarily causal claims per se in her theses, causal arguments can certainly be made from the claims made here. Username could say, for example, that rapists go free when legislators, judges, and prosecutors are primarily male. She could identify the dehumanizing, devaluing, decriminalizing effects of an archaic definition of rape. The definition is far more important than a semantic exercise. It is legal language with very specific statutory requirements for law enforcement. Criminals have been exonerated by a reliance on fundamental flaws in the definition of what means consent, and when persuasion becomes coercion. Such are the effects of leftover language that causes behavior to be interpreted in the criminals’ favor.

Username
Username promises to “talk about” genedercide in general and about infanticide in China and India in particular. In other words, she makes the classic error of failing to make an actual proposal or provide a thesis. Therefore, we cannot know whether she considers China’s one-child policy, for example, to be an effect of some historical cause, or whether she wants to argue that it will have some unintended consequences. Rather than provide a general survey of gendercide (for what reason?) she will be wise to choose a much narrower topic and make a specific argument. For example: What message does it send to Chinese girls that so many of them are killed before they can mature by a society that vastly prefers male children? How many generations will they have to suffer this underclass status before they begin to achieve equality? Are there any indications of a turnaround in this national attitude?

Works Cited
Cite 3-5 sources for your Causal Argument Essay. It’s possible they’ll be repeats of earlier-cited sources, but consider it an opportunity to impress me by adding new legitimate sources for this new paper. If they are new, identify them before the citation as: NEW SOURCE.

ASSIGNMENT SPECIFICS

  • Write your third Shorter Argument paper.
  • The paper will take the form of a Causal Argument as described above.
  • Identify and explain the strongest cause and effect sequence in your argument.
  • Anticipate and refute rebuttals to your causal analysis if necessary.
  • Include Works Cited.
  • Call your post Causal Essay—Username.
  • But in addition to that placeholder title, also give your essay a proper title. For example, this post is titled “Helmets Prevent Injury (by Preventing Biking).”
  • Publish your causal essay in the A09: Causal Essay category.

GRADE DETAILS

  • DUE SUN APR 05 before midnight.
  • Customary late penalties. (0-24 hours 10%) (24-48 hours 20%) (48+ hours, 0 grade)
  • Shorter Arguments grade category (20%)
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