I'm surprised to not see much discussion here...
I got to (D) by eliminating all the others but I'm not sure if I truly understand how (D) works. So if any LSAT guru can check my take for this, thanks!
So the core is:
PRE:
Rhododendrons curl (RC) ---> Temperature below 0
Crocus Blossom (CB) ---> Temperature above 2
~RC & ~CB (Negation of the Sufficient)
CON:
Temperature between 0-2
The flaw as I saw, is the classic A-->B, so ~A-->~B fallacy.
To get this conclusion, one either assumed A is the
necessary condition of B, in conditional logic,
or A is the
only cause that leads to B, in a causal relationship.
Since we are dealing with conditional logic here (it's not the curling or the blossom that
caused the temperature to be in certain range, only indicators), so we shall attack it by saying A is not the necessary condition for B.
So when ~A happens, ~B doesn't also occur. (If A is the necessary condition for B, then if A is negated, B would be negated as well)
Specifically in this case, we shall establish even when we observed both ~RC and ~CB, the temperature is
not between 0-2.
(D), out of the blue, accomplished this super straight-forwardly (to an extent I find weird) by saying that, (no matter what), temperature surrounding R is like to differ than that surrounding C, by more than 2 degrees.
See, in the author's conclusion, the temperature is between 0-2 degrees.
The range is at most 2 degrees (2 minus 0). But if R's temperature always differs C's temperature
by more than 2 degrees, how can it be between 0-2 degrees?
Thus destroyed the argument by saying no matter what, the assumed consequence is unlikely to be true.
The weirdness I saw here is (D) mentions
nothing about the premise. It's highly unusual, because like previously mentioned, we would expect them to first bring up a circumstance where
~RC & ~CB happens, the contradicting result follows.
It's like Mary says: the global warming will slow down if we cut CO2 emission. Her aggressive friend responds to her: Hey, the global warming is forever and ever unlikely to be slowed down.
It's valid refutation, but it's strange. ...Won't Mary feel stupid, that her whole set of argument is actually no worth consideration at all? (or maybe it's just me
)
Since we've come this far, might as well take a look at why the others are wrong...
(A) says R & C will never bloom in the same time. But we don't need R to bloom as well, for R, we only care if it's leaves are curled.
(B) just gave up trying. Maybe it tries to say people don't want to observe outdoor temperature when it's cold, but R & C can totally grow together inside of the room.
(C) says R & C favor the same climate and soil conditions. Maybe it's implying R & C could grow together. But even if anything, it seems to be strengthening the argument a bit or totally irrelevant.
(E) says certain thermometers are extremely accurate in moderate temperature but much less accurate in warmer & colder temperatures. Well, which does 0-2 degrees fall into? And even if so, couldn't less accurate than extremely accurate, still pretty accurate?
So as it turns out, the four wrong answer choices are pretty easy to get rid of.