
Thanks, I missed that on TV
and their "notable studies?"
I bet they cannot show
causation... they MIGHT show a
correlation though ... see below
fallacy of false
cause (in numerous forms)
http://philosophy.lander.edu/logic/cause.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
IV. Establishing causality in science is difficult. Usually if all A's are followed by B's then one suspect that A caused B. But even this generalization could be a coincidence. For the most part, causality is no longer used in science; correlation is sought instead.
Philosophy 103: Introduction to Logic
False Cause
Abstract: The fallacy of false cause and its forms as non causa pro causa and post hoc ergo propter hoc is disussed with examples.
Fallacy of false cause or non sequitur: incorrectly assumes one thing is the
cause of another. Non Sequitur is Latin for "It does not follow."
Non causa pro causa:
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
Perhaps increased assaults prompted higher rates of Concealed carry in a geographic location and they merely compare # of assaults with population/licensee ratio compared to other locales with other ratios of licensees to crimes without establishing a
causal relationship
or they may be using studies which confuse "justified defense" with "assault/violent crime" like the ignoramus at A&M recently
Cause versus correlation
There may be a
CORRELATION that more assaults occur where more licensees are, if more people get a license due to a (beCAUSE of a) lot of assaults, but the assaults
caused more licensees, the licensees didn't
cause the assaults (which is what they want you to believe)
I contend that "gun violence" only occurs when one falls off a shelf in an earthquake and hits you on the head or some other similar incident occurs with no human intervention.
Edited to fix ration back to the intended word ratio (stupid spell checker)