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External Websites
- Princeton University - Probabilism and Induction
- Pressbooks - Inductive and deductive reasoning
- Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Deductive and Inductive Arguments
- University of Minnesota Libraries - A Guide to Good Reasoning: Cultivating Intellectual Virtues - How to think about Inductive Logic
- LiveScience - Deductive reasoning vs. Inductive reasoning
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Inductive Logic
- Social Sciences Libretexts - Inductive Reasoning
- Academia - Inductive Logic
- College of DuPage Digital Press - Inductive Reasoning
Category:
History & Society
- Related Topics:
- logic
- mathematical induction
- problem of induction
- reason
- inference
induction, in logic, method of reasoning from a part to a whole, from particulars to generals, or from the individual to the universal. As it applies to logic in systems of the 20th century, the term is obsolete. Traditionally, logicians distinguished between deductive logic (inference in which the conclusion follows necessarily from the premise, or drawing new propositions out of premises in which they lie latent) and inductive logic, but the problems earlier subsumed under induction are considered to be concerns of the methodology of the natural sciences, and logic is generally taken to mean deductive logic.