Don't confuse conditional language (one thing "requires" another) with causal language (one thing happens "because of" another). There is no "because" in this relationship, Jenna, so remove that word completely from your analysis. The author says if you are successful then you must also be lucky, but he is not saying that success is due to luck, or caused by luck, in whole or in part. There is some implied causality for sure - "benefited" is slightly active - but on its face this argument is just conditional.
The book says if success, then luck (S
L). The author says no, that false, because success requires hard work (S
HW). The problem is he falls to recognize that one thing can be sufficient for both of the other things, or perhaps that he improperly assumes that luck means no hard work (L
HW).
Regardless of how you diagram it, it's a conditional flaw, and answer A is the only one to describe anything conditional, so it's the best choice.
I hope that helps! Good luck!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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