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deductive
[ dih-duhk-tiv ]
deductive
/ »åɪˈ»åÊŒ°ì³Ùɪ±¹ /
adjective
- of or relating to deduction
deductive reasoning
Confusables Note
Derived Forms
- »å±ðˈ»å³Ü³¦³Ù¾±±¹±ð±ô²â, adverb
Other ˜yÐÄvlogs From
- »å±ð·»å³Ü³¦î€ƒt¾±±¹±ð·±ô²â adverb
- ²Ô´Ç²Ôd±ð·»å³Ü³¦î€ƒt¾±±¹±ð adjective
- non»å±ð·»å³Ü³¦î€ƒt¾±±¹±ð·±ô²â adverb
- ³Ü²Ôd±ð·»å³Ü³¦î€ƒt¾±±¹±ð adjective
- un»å±ð·»å³Ü³¦î€ƒt¾±±¹±ð·±ô²â adverb
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of deductive1
Example Sentences
Arm in arm with this, and less discussed, is the death of deductive logic, the ability to understand cause and effect by composing simple conditional arguments with an antecedent and a consequent.
Not through any kind of intuition or deductive superpower, mind you.
Instead of receiving science through set experiments with known outcomes, students should learn to apply deductive and inductive reasoning to weigh information before blindly accepting results.
A mathematician might point to a deductive argument, a scientist to experiments, and a lawyer to courtroom evidence and testimony.
“It’s mastered the style of being linguistically human, but it doesn’t have explicit programming to do exactly the things that computers have so far been very good at, which is very recipelike, deductive logic.â€
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