Multiple Choice

A historian is evaluating the claim that the development of the railroad was essential for the 19th-century economic development of the American West. The historian argues against this claim using the following reasoning:

'The railroad was not truly necessary. If railroads had not been developed, investment would have simply shifted to improving and expanding canals and river transport. Since water transport was cheaper for heavy goods, the same level of economic development would have been achieved, just through a different transportation system.'

What is the most significant logical weakness in this historian's counterfactual argument?

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Updated 2025-07-27

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