Note to other readers: the page reference here refers to the 2015 edition. In the 2016 edition, the discussion referenced here is on page 269.
Hi Tommy,
Thanks for the questions! As far as the contrapositive, over time you will come to simply realize what it is automatically, and then use it when needed. to me, the CP is something that's always there. In the LRB, the analogy I use is that a statement and its contrapositive are like two sides of a coin: you may only be looking at the front, but you know the back is always there. So, in a Logic game, when i see a rule like A
B, I automatically know that
B A is also true. At first, we advise you to write that CP down because it reinforces the idea. But over time you will find that you don't always need to write it down; recognizing it becomes second nature.
When does it come into play? When the condition is triggered. If you were doing a game and all you saw was "A", then you would just worry about A
B. But, if you saw a situation where
B occurred, then that would trigger the CP, and you'd know that
B A was in play.
The same thing is true for lining rules together. Let's say I'm given the following two rules:
A
B
B
C
Ok, I can see that B is common to both, and it's in a position where I can easily link them together to form the following chain:
A
B
C
Now let's say that instead I'm given the following two rules:
C
D
G
D
I can see that D exists in both chains, but in different forms. Wait, if I take the CP of either rule, I can link them together:
C
D
D G
Which can then be linked as: C
D G
Or, take the CP of the first rule instead:
D
C
G
D
Which can then be linked as: G
D
C
The cool thing there is that those chains are contrapositives of each other, which means they are basically identical in functional meaning. So, no matter which one you use to take the CP, you still arrive at the same place
The more you study, the easier all this gets, and you will start to see the CP as an ever-present element in conditional reasoning. You know it's there, but you only have to use it when you see other things that force it to occur.
Please let me know if that helps. Thanks!