Answer:
4. All of the oranges in the cart are bruised. It's only logical then, that I can't find an orange that isn't bruised. Then, since you can't make orange juice from bruised oranges, I may as well conclude that I won't be making orange juice tonight. Since I won't be making orange juice tonight, I suppose I won't have any with my breakfast tomorrow. If I can't have orange juice, I won't want to eat my breakfast. Because the oranges are bruised, I won't be eating any breakfast tomorrow.
Step-by-step explanation:
Sentence number four is the only one that makes use of a logical order of reasoning to arrange sentences. In that respect, it provides plausible argumentation for each occurrence the narrator describes, whose account jumps to the conclusion that he or she will not be able to eat breakfast tomorrow because all the oranges are bruised.
The rest of the paragraphs are do not follow a logical line of reasoning, since the sentence order makes the text inconsistent and senseless.