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Vladv Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Concurrence and casuality

Please explain the underlined terms in the following context. Is it that the decisions Putin makes dont reflect his innermost or what? Thanks a lot. Here is a link http://www.the-american-interest.com/2015/07/30/putinology/ Concurrence is not causality in political analysis any more than correlation is causality in science. Yet one may point to key choices Putin has made that seem indicative of deeply held motives. In every case his choice corresponds to a major domestic discontinuity.

  

Top answer

Concurrence is not causality in political analysis Political analysts should not assume that two things have a common cause just because they happen at the same time. correlation is causality in science. This refers to the mistaken belief by some scientists that two related things have a common cause.

  • Concurrence is not causality in political analysis Political analysts should not assume that two things have a common cause just because they happen at the same time.
  • correlation is causality in science.
  • This refers to the mistaken belief by some scientists that two related things have a common cause.
  • The writer is saying that the latter is commonly understood to be an error in science, and that the former should equally be considered an error in political analysis.
  • I'm not sure how this relates to Putin's beliefs and actions because your link won't work for me.
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2 Answers
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Concurrence is not causality in political analysis Political analysts should not assume that two things have a common cause just because they happen at the same time.

correlation is causality in science. This refers to the mistaken belief by some scientists that two related things have a common cause.

The writer is saying that the latter is commonly un

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Concurrence = two different things occur at the same time, or in a particular sequence.

Causality = one action or event causes a second event to happen, at the same time, or in a particular sequence.


The text says that just because you have concurrence (or correlation) between two things, it does not necessarily imply that one caused the other.

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