People tend to make consistent mistakes in logical reasoning even though reasoning is used every day. These errors tend to be more prevalent in deductive logic where the conclusion has no personal benefit to them. To further understand why people make these consistent mistakes in logical reasoning, I created three different rules and a brief 25 question inventory aiming at interpersonal trust. Each participant was presented with a social contract rule, a precautionary rule, and a descriptive rule in random order and the 25 question inventory at the end. The data for this research is still being collected.