For this particular problem, I see how the author is making the link between stress and the way people approach and think about their problems. The correct answer choice states that refusing to think about something troubling contributes to stress, which captures this idea. However, I'm wondering why the relationship couldn't be reversed, with the refusal to think being a result rather than the cause of stress. Even after BR and reviewing the explanation, I understood that there was being link between those two concepts but didn't fully understand the direction of that causal link because the stimulus was so odd.
https://7sage.com/lsat_explanations/lsat-70-section-4-question-10/
Comments
Remind me---was this strengthen or explain the discrepancy?
@"S.P. 170", it doesnt make a distinction between the levels of stress
So here, if you negate the AC: refusing to think about something troubling DOES NOT contribute to stress, then it wrecks the argument in the stimulus, which is why this assumption is necessary to the argument.
The relationship can be reversed, of course. The test writers just chose not to include it in the ACs. Since I don't have the stimulus in front of me, I'm not sure if it will still be a NA though. Could you restate the causal chain you think could have worked as an AC here?