Hey there jayzbrisk, that was a lot of analysis, but let me get to something you said at the very end:
The only way I see answer A as a contender is to assume that it is more likely to get hit in a high traffic area
Is that really too much of an outside assumption? If I asked you to cross a street with high traffic, like for example a busy downtown street in a city during rush hour, wouldn't you expect a greater sense of danger than if you were to cross, say, a one-lane farm road in the middle of nowhere?
Answer A does require the assumption that the danger of being hit by a car is greater when there are more cars than when there are relatively few, but that is not a big outside assumption. Rather, that sounds a lot more like common sense, the kind of outside info that you are expected to bring to bear on the LSAT, like knowing that animals require food and water and air to survive, or that if the sun is shining then it is probably daytime.
While we could certainly come up with numbers that suggest that answer A does not disprove the conclusion here, that is not the standard to apply to a weaken question. Instead, all we need is some element of doubt - in this case, the possibility that there is some other cause for the results in the stimulus. Answer A suggests a possible alternate cause for the numeric info given, and that is enough for it to weaken the argument, even if it is not completely disproven. If the cause for the disparity could be just that more people cross in crosswalks in areas where the danger is at its highest, then we cannot be so sure that "overconfident/not paying attention" is the cause.
Remember, to weaken, don't try to disprove! Just look for the answer that introduces an element of doubt.
Adam M. Tyson
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