Throughout all the Powerscore training, it has been made clear to us that we shouldn't have to "advocate" for a right answer or perform mental gymnastics to make it work. It should be correct on its own. Yet with D, the LSAT writers are asking us to make two assumptions to make the answer work.
1) We have to assume that watching an identical twin is analogous to watching oneself. The stimulus specifically states that the group that watched
other people exercise was not the group that exercised more. Since the study compared people who watched a video of themselves with a group of people who watched other people, this is an important distinction that we are now asked to ignore. In real life, it is still possible to tell identical twins apart and common sense says that a person could certainly tell the difference between themselves and their twin.
2) We are asked to make the leap between a sedentary activity (reading) and exercising. We have no information that would suggest that these are in any way linked. Perhaps watching someone exercise is motivating but watching someone read might make a person want to sleep more? Or might make someone feel bored and overreport the amount of time they spend reading...
I feel like if we were being asked to make one leap, it might make more sense, but being asked to make two is really asking us fight for this answer choice. Can someone please explain to me when we should expect to advocate for answer choices and when it is appropriate to follow the normal rules?