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14.3: Inductive Reasoning- Five Methods

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    199360
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    Inductive reasoning is the process of reasoning from specifics to a general conclusion related to those specifics. You have a series of facts and/or observations. From all of this data you draw a conclusion (sometimes called a "general rule"). Although not the best analogy, inductive reasoning is a bit like addition in math: a series of facts or observations "add up" to a conclusion. (This is why, when something doesn't make sense, one hears people say, "That doesn't add up!") Inductive reasoning allows humans to create generalizations about people, events, and things in their environment. There are five methods of inductive reasoning:

    • example
    • cause
    • sign
    • comparison
    • authority