"Inductive reasoning" Essays and Research Papers

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    Commercial Analysis Unit 9 Assignment Andreia Evans HU345 – Critical Thinking Kaplan University Professor Ronald Davenport July 15‚ 2014 Commercial Analysis Often varying in message and purpose‚ commercials and advertisements have proven to be successful forms and methods of mass communication. The goals of advertisements is to appeal to their target audience in an effort to encourage or persuade that demographic to purchase their products and become their customer. Some companies may

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    reason in order to Student Answer: understand their own reasoning better. prevent being deceived by bad arguments. improving their skills in arguing. *** All of the above Instructor Explanation: The answer can be found in Chapter One of An Introduction to Logic. Points Received: 0 of 1 Comments: 3. Question : Logic is the study of Student Answer: the human mind. *** reasoning. emotions. psychology. Instructor Explanation:

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    Inductive Argument

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    April 22‚ 2014 Inductive and Deductive Argument Instructor: Ivey Shelton CRT/205 While reading both articles The Death Penalty Violates the Constitution of the United States and Cyberbullying Has a Broader Impact than Traditional Bullying‚ I found that there were both deductive and inductive argument presented with in the articles. On the first article about the death penalty‚ the author used inductive arguments to make his point. An example of and inductive argument in this article

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    Diary of a Wimpy Kid

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    because around age 11‚ adolescents begin to enter the formal operational stage. Here‚ they develop the ability for abstract‚ systematic thinking. Hypothetic-deductive reasoning allows them to predict consequences and use propositional thought to evaluate thoughts and understand logic without real-world examples. Greg originally used inductive logic and was unable to use his principles to predict outcomes. He didn’t think about how ignoring Rowley’s feelings‚ threatening older kids‚ or how terrorizing children

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    Minto Principle

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    main Thesis in increasing detail (granularity). See the picture on the right. Supporting arguments can be based on: * Inductive reasoning: thinking process in which the premises of an argument support the conclusion but do not ensure it. Each of the elements in row two of the pyramid answers a question (e.g. why‚ how‚ how do you know) about the thesis above it. * Deductive reasoning: thinking process in which the conclusion is necessitated by previously known facts. One element logically leads to

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    sections‚ two premises and a conclusion based on those premises. As reason is most frequently associated with logic‚ there are two different ways in which we base our logic on. Deductive knowledge is going from the general to the specific while inductive knowledge is going from the specific to the general. The biggest problem with logic is that your conclusion can be valid but not true. For example‚ your syllogism could be: Socrates is a man- all men are mortal- therefore‚ Socrates is mortal. The

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    Kooora

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    John Stuart Mill The Project Gutenberg EBook of A System of Logic: Ratiocinative and Inductive‚ by John Stuart Mill This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it‚ give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: A System of Logic: Ratiocinative and Inductive 7th Edition‚ Vol. I Author: John Stuart Mill Release Date: February 27‚ 2011 [EBook

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    and have a higher chance at success. Creative thinking is the thinking when we are coming up with new ideas. This is for example: writing an essay‚ painting‚ writing music‚ inventing a new type of processor for a computer‚ etc. It is also called inductive thinking. This is when you two things share common similarities‚ so then if a third thing is similar to one of them‚ then it is equivalent to them. This isn’t always true‚ but is the basic idea. It is also the thinking when you are coming up with

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    Concrete Operations Stage

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    operations. Children begin thinking logically about concrete events‚ but have difficulty understanding abstract or hypothetical concepts. Piaget determined that children in the concrete operational stage were fairly good at the use of inductive logic. Inductive logic involves going from a specific experience to a general principle. On the other hand‚ children at this age have difficulty using deductive logic‚ which involves using a general principle to determine the outcome of a specific event

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    Analyzing the syllogisms

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    Syllogism 1 All college students are required to take a Humanities class. Critical Thinking is a Humanities class. All college students take Critical Thinking. This syllogism is inductive. I believe this to be true because one of the premises is probable; it is possible for the conclusion to be false. Students may take a humanity class other than critical thinking. I do not think this syllogism is deductively valid because one of the premises may not be true and that could make the conclusion

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