- Fri May 20, 2011 10:26 am
#237
Hi Mark,
Thanks for the message. You are going to see a lot more of the contrapositive, so over time you will grow accustomed to it, and eventually I'm certain you will be very comfortable with how it works. Here are some thoughts that might help you out.
First, I don't think of using it at specific times. Rather, I think of it as an ever present element that I know is there. When an answer matches it, then I know that and can select it with confidence.
Second, there is a contrapositive for every conditional statement, so it is always present when a conditional statement appears. The contrapositive is simply a different way of expressing the initial statement. To analogize, it is like examining a penny: both sides look different but intrinsically the value is the same. So, if the contrapositive is always there, as a student you should simply learn to be aware of that and know what it looks like mentally. For example, if I know that one of the rules is: when R is played, then T is played, I know I have a diagram that looks like this:
R ---> T
Some people then ask, should I also diagram the contrapositive, which is NOT T ---> NOT R ? My answer to that is no. If you are used to thinking that the contrapositive is always present, then you don't need to diagram it. But, if another rule or question comes up that would connect to the contrapositive, then I am ready to apply it immediately.
Does that help? Please let me know. Conditional reasoning is difficult, and a topic that I also cover in even greater depth in the Logical Reasoning Bible because a ton of Logical Reasoning questions deal with conditional statement and the contrapositive.
Thanks and good luck with the studying!