That piece of advice applies to every rule in every game, rahuldesarda, but in the case of the rule referred to in that explanation it is especially important, because that is one of the most misunderstood rules in all of conditional reasoning. In fact, Dave recently re-posted an old blog article about that very type of rule, calling it "The Most Dangerous Conditional Rule on the LSAT". Here's that post:
https://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/the-mo ... -rule-lsat
Rules with a negated sufficient condition and a positive necessary condition, which can be read along the lines of "if not this, then that", mean that at least one of the two conditions must always occur. If the first thing is out, the second is in, and if the second is out, the first is in. Maybe they are both in - that doesn't violate the rule or its contrapositive - but they can never both be out.
Pay careful attention to that kind of rule, for when it appears you will have the opportunity to make a few key inferences and probably get one or two questions that become very easy as a result of your superior understanding.
Read Dave's post - you won't regret it!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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