Show $K_\rho$ is a proper extension of $K_\eta$:
$K_\rho$ is an extension of $K$ where $R$ is reflexive. And $K_\eta$ is an extension of $K$ where $R$ is extendable.
So, I reasoned as follows:
$K_\rho$ is a proper extension of $K$ because it can prove $(\Box p \supset p)$ and $K$ cannot.
And $K_\eta$ is a proper extension of $K$ because it can prove $\Box p \supset\Diamond p$ and $K$ cannot.
Now, $K_\rho$ can prove $\Box p \supset\Diamond p$ but $K_\eta$ cannot prove $\Box p \supset p$.
So, $K_\rho$ can prove more inferences than $K_\eta$.
And so here finally is my question: I am asked to supply an example of such an inference. To do this, could I just use the inference from $\Box p$ to $ p$?
Also, what does this tell me about the set of interpretations that make the sets of inferences of either $K_\eta$ and $K_\rho$ true?
For this last question, is it correct that if there are more restrictions on the $R$ relationship there will be more inferences it can prove but, conversely, fewer interpretations that model those inferences, compared to another logic with fewer restrictions on $R$?
And if so, I don't quite follow how $K_\rho$ is thought to have more restrictions on its $R$ than $K_\eta$. I feel like reflexivity is more generalized than extendability. But perhaps I'm just getting confused.
Thanks for any and all help!
BTW this is all from Graham Priests's Non-Classical Logic Book, pg 37, question 3.10.7a.