<p>I suck on them. All kinds. Any tips?</p>
<p>This is honestly the most general question I’ve ever heard, considering that every question on the SAT is a logic problem. What type of logic problems are you referring to?</p>
<p>If it’s mathematical logic, such questions on the SAT are very limited. Basically all you need to know is that if P → Q, then Q’ → P’.</p>
<p>I try to adapt them to my life. There is one in the blue book about the members of a family all being over 6 feet tall. So I think of a family I know like that, and then eliminate answer choices that are not true about the family I know.</p>
<p>rspence: What do you mean by P → Q, then Q’ → P’. I googled it and it didn’t really make sense :/</p>
<p>PSVicki: Good idea! Thanks! :D</p>
<p>I think he is talking about a logic statement.
If P then Q
If Q’ then P’ (the prime symbol means opposite of the statement, simply adding a “not”)</p>
<p>E.g.</p>
<p>If square then rectangle (p then q)</p>
<p>If not rectangle, then not square (q’ then p’)</p>
<p>It is the contrapositive. Look that up if you need more info.</p>