To: mrs smith
Deductive reasoning is what we all use on a daily basis.
Conclusions derived from premises.
331 posted on
02/25/2020 7:30:52 PM PST by
reasonisfaith
(What are the implications if the Resurrection of Christ is a true event in history?)
To: mrs smith
Shall we go on?
Teaching is a great hobby of mine.
333 posted on
02/25/2020 7:31:41 PM PST by
reasonisfaith
(What are the implications if the Resurrection of Christ is a true event in history?)
To: reasonisfaith
Show enough reasoning to get my name straight LOL!
Anyway.
Just thought you might wan, and be able to, csontribute.
340 posted on
02/25/2020 7:35:13 PM PST by
mrsmith
(Dumb sluts (M / F) : Lifeblood of the Media, Backbone of the Democrat/RINO Party!)
To: reasonisfaith
Psych 101A -Deductive reasoning is defined as an argument where the conclusion is a logical consequence of its premise. Many believe that if THEIR conclusions follow logically from THEIR premises, then THEIR conclusions must be true. But those very conclusions, when made in a vacuum, may be true or they may be invalid. That is, that ‘deductive’ reasoning may in fact be biased reasoning. False reasoning that leads to some pretty stupid behavior. Example - one truth: Johnny jumped off the cliff into the water and didn't break his leg on the rocks beneath the surface. False conclusion: Jumping off the cliff is safe. Alternate truth: 100 others jumped and have broken legs. Accurate deduction: Jumping off the cliff will almost always result in broken legs and Johnny is likely a statistical anomaly. Another example - the blind men and the elephant. An essential element of accurate deductions is peer review, such as is happening on these threads.
564 posted on
02/26/2020 7:41:03 AM PST by
blueplum
( ("...this moment is your moment: it belongs to you... " President Donald J. Trump, Jan 20, 2017))
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