- Tue Nov 22, 2016 12:43 pm
#30795
The problem with answer C, adlindsey, is that it really tells us nothing about stress vs. not stress. While it's true that it suggests that the survey the author relied upon may not be that reliable, and that weakens any argument that is based on the survey, it still leaves us wondering. According to answer C, a majority of survey respondents felt boredom more recently than stress, so that's why they placed boredom at the top of the complaint list. That might help our author, as previously explained in this thread, or it might hurt the argument if we invent out of thin air the idea that those folks were actually stressed a lot but just happened to be bored recently. It might just leave us scratching our heads because we don't know that boredom and stress don't go hand in hand.
That's what makes B so much better, and we want the best answer, not just one that weakens but the one that does the most to weaken. The author here has assumed that boredom indicates a lack of stress. B tells us in no uncertain terms that boredom and stress do go together, that bored people are stressed people. If that's so, then that really crushes his claim that stress is not an issue. While C leaves us wondering if maybe the author might be right and might be wrong, because the survey may be unreliable, B tells us that the survey actually disproves his conclusion. That's much more convincing!
Focus not just on whether an answer might work, but on which one is the best answer, and answers like C will become much less attractive. Don't go out of your way to help an answer to be better than it really is! Answer C is okay, but still needs help, whereas answer B stands tall on its own.
That's what makes B so much better, and we want the best answer, not just one that weakens but the one that does the most to weaken. The author here has assumed that boredom indicates a lack of stress. B tells us in no uncertain terms that boredom and stress do go together, that bored people are stressed people. If that's so, then that really crushes his claim that stress is not an issue. While C leaves us wondering if maybe the author might be right and might be wrong, because the survey may be unreliable, B tells us that the survey actually disproves his conclusion. That's much more convincing!
Focus not just on whether an answer might work, but on which one is the best answer, and answers like C will become much less attractive. Don't go out of your way to help an answer to be better than it really is! Answer C is okay, but still needs help, whereas answer B stands tall on its own.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam