a general conclusion is like an overall outcome. for example: the class' general conclusion was that there should be no homework for a week.
deductive
The three parts to a conclusion: 1. Restates the main premise 2. Presents one or two general sentences which accurately summarise your arguments which support the main premise 3. Provides a general warning of the consequences of not following the premise that you put forward and/or a general statement of how the community will benefit from following that premise
it ic called deduction
it ic called deduction
A summary is a general description of a topic. A conlusion presents the results of a study or research. A summary is a list of the important steps in a piece of work. A conclusion is something that you have discovered from doing the work that can be deduced logically from the results.
A conclusion that is more general and can be applied to the general public
a general conclusion is like an overall outcome. for example: the class' general conclusion was that there should be no homework for a week.
Yes, arguments can move from a specific premise to a specific conclusion, which is known as a deductive argument. They can also move from a general premise to a general conclusion, which is known as an inductive argument. The structure and validity of the argument depend on the relationship between the premise and conclusion.
An argument can move from a specific premise to a specific conclusion by providing detailed evidence or examples to support the specific claim. On the other hand, an argument can move from a general premise to a general conclusion by making a broad assertion based on the general principle presented. Both forms of arguments can be effective depending on the context and the strength of the premises.
The use of a specific observation to reach a general conclusion. (APEX)
The process of arriving at a specific conclusion based on previously accepted general statements? Is called extrapolation.
Inductive.
return the discussion to a general level
Deductive
Inductive.
Valid ArgumentThanks to the above answerer, I got this question wrong on my quiz.The correct answer is Valid argument.
Deductive reasoning