Specious causal attributions in the social sciences: the reformulated stepping-stone theory of heroin use as exemplar.

The claims based on causal models employing either statistical or experimental controls are examined and found to be excessive when applied to social or behavioral science data. An exemplary case, in which strong causal claims are made on the basis of a weak version of the regularity model of cause, is critiqued. O'Donnell and Clayton claim that in order to establish that marijuana use is a cause of heroin use (their "reformulated stepping-stone" hypothesis), it is necessary and sufficient to demonstrate that marijuana use precedes heroin use and that the statistically significant association between the two does not vanish when the effects of other variables deemed to be prior to both of them are removed. I argue that O'Donnell and Clayton's version of the regularity model is not sufficient to establish cause and that the planning of social interventions both presumes and requires a generative rather than a regularity causal model. Causal modeling using statistical controls is of value when it compels the investigator to make explicit and to justify a causal explanation but not when it is offered as a substitute for a generative analysis of causal connection.

[1]  Some Theses in the Philosophy of Logic , 1938, Philosophy of Science.

[2]  H. Simon,et al.  Spurious Correlation: A Causal Interpretation* , 1954 .

[3]  H. M. Blalock, Making Causal Inferences for Unmeasured Variables from Correlations Among Indicators , 1963, American Journal of Sociology.

[4]  M. Yarrow Problems of methods in parent-child research. , 1963, Child development.

[5]  O. D. Duncan Path Analysis: Sociological Examples , 1966, American Journal of Sociology.

[6]  C. Hempel Philosophy of Natural Science , 1966 .

[7]  Jürgen Habermas,et al.  Towards a theory of communicative competence , 1970 .

[8]  David Hume A Treatise of Human Nature: Being an Attempt to introduce the experimental Method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects , 1972 .

[9]  Jürgen Habermas,et al.  Toward A Rational Society , 1970 .

[10]  R. Harré,et al.  The explanation of social behaviour , 1973 .

[11]  K S Bowers,et al.  Situationism in psychology: an analysis and a critique. , 1973, Psychological review.

[12]  O. D. Duncan,et al.  Introduction to Structural Equation Models. , 1977 .

[13]  Jacob Cohen,et al.  Applied multiple regression/correlation analysis for the behavioral sciences , 1979 .

[14]  R. Room,et al.  Young men and drugs-a nationwide survey. , 1976, NIDA research monograph.

[15]  R. Mccall Challenges to a science of developmental psychology. , 1977 .

[16]  U. Bronfenbrenner Toward an Experimental Ecology of Human Development. , 1977 .

[17]  P. Bentler MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS WITH LATENT VARIABLES: CAUSAL MODELING , 1980 .

[18]  Johnson Bd Toward a theory of drug subcultures. , 1980 .

[19]  K. A. Ericsson,et al.  Verbal reports as data. , 1980 .

[20]  R. Clayton,et al.  Young men and drugs in Manhattan: a causal analysis. , 1981, NIDA research monograph.

[21]  P. Bentler,et al.  A comparison of two latent variable causal models for adolescent drug use. , 1981, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[22]  D. A. Kenny,et al.  Correlation and Causation , 1937, Wilmott.

[23]  R. Clayton,et al.  The stepping-stone hypothesis--marijuana, heroin, and causality. , 1982, Chemical dependencies.

[24]  P M Bentler,et al.  On the usefulness of latent variable causal modeling in testing theories of naturally occurring events (including adolescent drug use): a rejoinder to Martin. , 1982, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[25]  T. Shultz Rules of Causal Attribution. , 1982 .

[26]  J. Martin Application of structural modeling with latent variables to adolescent drug use: a reply to Huba, Wingard, and Bentler. , 1982, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[27]  D. Brodzinsky Relationship between cognitive style and cognitive development: A 2-year longitudinal study. , 1982 .