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Suppose we had a rule 6 situation where B goes to A and C goes to A, but B also goes to D and E goes to C. What happens if there are other pieces in the chain (for example, the D and E) when you take the contrapositive of the rule 6 group (A, B, C)? Do you also take the contrapositive of those? Like basically taking the contrapositive of the whole entire thing?
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Wait I'm sorry what is Rule 6? Is this referring to a specific question or something from the Core Curriculum? Not sure what Rule 6 is but just going off your chain...
Someone correct me if I'm wrong but it seems
B goes to A, C, D, E.
C goes to A.
So if you contrapose the entire thing it would be
/A -> /C -> /B
D and E is kind of a separate part of the chain is the way I see it.
/D -> /B
/E -> /B
7Sage has some really good videos on this I'd recommend starting here:
https://classic.7sage.com/lesson/introduction-to-logic-games/