Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Medical professor Alan J. Card also criticized the five whys as a poor root cause analysis tool and suggested that it be abandoned because of the following reasons: [10] The artificial depth of the fifth why is unlikely to correlate with the root cause.
Post hoc ergo propter hoc (Latin: 'after this, therefore because of this') is an informal fallacy that states "Since event Y followed event X, event Y must have been caused by event X." It is a fallacy in which an event is presumed to have been caused by a closely preceding event merely on the grounds of temporal succession.
The reasoning was that the people got sick because the lice left. The real reason however is that lice are extremely sensitive to body temperature. A small increase of body temperature, such as in a fever, makes the lice look for another host. The medical thermometer had not yet been invented and so that increase in temperature was rarely ...
About 40% of American adults are living with obesity — and for many, it can feel a bit like a roller-coaster as their weight fluctuates. Experts explain the science behind "yo-yo dieting."
Aristotle distinguished between intrinsic and extrinsic causes. Matter and form are intrinsic causes because they deal directly with the object, whereas efficient and finality causes are said to be extrinsic because they are external. [8] Thomas Aquinas demonstrated that only those four types of causes can exist and no others. He also ...
However, a recent study of men ages 20 to 44 suggested the following ranges were more accurate based on different age groups: 20-24 years old: 409-558 ng/dL 25-29 years old: 413-575 ng/dL
A reason, in many cases, is brought up by the question "why?", and answered following the word because. Additionally, words and phrases such as since , due to , as , considering ( that ), a result ( of ), and in order to , for example, all serve as explanatory locutions that precede the reason to which they refer.
Causality is an influence by which one event, process, state, or object (a cause) contributes to the production of another event, process, state, or object (an effect) where the cause is at least partly responsible for the effect, and the effect is at least partly dependent on the cause. [1]