Suppose that a homeowner notices a 20 percent increase in the water bill for July. The homeowner traces this increase to four sources: a running toilet, a dripping faucet, a guest who visited for two days, and a broken sprinkler head. Further study shows that the broken toilet accounts for 8 percent of the increase, the faucet 2 percent, and the visiting guest 4 percent. The homeowner concludes that the remaining 8 percent is attributable to the broken sprinkler head. What method did the homeowner use in drawing this conclusion?

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Causality is the relationship between a cause and its effect. It describes how one event, process, state, or object contributes to the production of another. The cause is partly responsible for the effect, and the effect is partly dependent on the cause.  For example, if event A happens and then event B happens, then A is the cause of B, and B is the effect of A.  Mill's methods are five methods of induction that analyze the differences and similarities between two or more groups of data to establish a causal relationship. The political philosopher John Stuart Mill described these methods... Show more

Suppose that a homeowner notices a 20 percent increase in the water bill for July. The homeowner traces this increase to four sources: a running toilet, a dripping faucet, a guest who visited for two days, and a broken sprinkler head. Further study shows that the broken toilet accounts for 8 percent of the increase, the faucet 2 percent, and the visiting guest 4 percent. The homeowner concludes that the remaining 8 percent is attributable to the broken sprinkler head. What method did the homeowner use in drawing this conclusion?