deductive

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Antonyms for deductive

involving inferences from general principles

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Deductively derived themes Subtheme 1: Career concern Subtheme 2: Career control Subtheme 3: Career curiosity Subtheme 4: Career confidence B.
I argued that '1+1=2' can deductively organize concrete sentences, but I provided only one example of a group of concrete sentences deductively organized by the mathematical sentence.
In this case, they performed a macroscopic study of the resulting bone degradation and could deductively link their findings to the action of termites by examining their nest remains and characteristic materials of this type of insect.
The interview data were analysed deductively (Thomas, 2006), allowing themes to emerge following the interview schedule.
8, I am fraught with fear of a potential Donald Trump victory at the hands of non-thinking malcontents - an electorate unable or unwilling to deductively reason the death-wish ramifications of such an event.
In other words, there is a potential in a Japanese company to enhance the overall corporate value exponentially by thoroughly studying sophisticated universal management skills and deploying them deductively in actual management.
As we teach students in introductory logic courses, deductively sound doxastic reasoning is just deductively valid doxastic reasoning from true premises.
moves deductively, presenting an overview of the general potential of ancient fiction to bear philosophical ideas.
Strategy does not come from the ground up; instead, tactics flow deductively once we've defined the ultimate objectives.
References to texts function for the most part deductively, either buttressing the thematic framework or elaborating on it.
The surprising lesson of the lottery paradox is that beliefs need not be deductively closed.
When it came to consideration of whether a bailee was under a duty to warn about insurance cover, then absent any authority on the question, it could have attracted analogically or deductively the principles governing duty to warn in tort cases, that is, where there was an alleged failure to warn (or an inadequate warning) about a foreseeable or unreasonable risk to person or property.
If an agent is certain of a claim p at time t or p is a claim deductively entailed by a certain claim then [P.sub.t](p) = 1.