Deductive Reasoning
No
The logical process of moving from a given statement or set of statements to a conclusion is called deductive reasoning. This type of reasoning involves drawing conclusions that are necessarily true based on the information provided in the premises.
A logical conclusion is a statement that can be inferred or deduced from the given premises by following a valid logical argument. It is an outcome that logically follows from the information provided and is considered to be true based on the validity of the argument.
A deductive statement is a logical argument where the conclusion is necessarily derived from the premises. It follows the structure of "if A is true, and B is a subset of A, then B is also true." Deductive reasoning aims to provide a valid and sound conclusion based on the given information.
Given a conditional statement of the form:If "hypothesis" then "conclusion",the inverse is:If "not hypothesis" then "not conclusion".
No
A logical conclusion is an assertion that can be inferred from premises based on deductive reasoning. It follows logically from the information provided and is considered a valid outcome of the given premises.
inverse
conclusion
theorem
The two parts of a logical argument are the premise (or premises) and the conclusion. The premise is the part of an argument that visibly have evidence or logical steps to reach a conclusion. A conclusion is the result of the reasoning in the premise.
Logical interpretation, based on factual knowledge, and experience.An inference is the term given to a statement that may not be true, but was based on evidence collected.You mean an inference- it is a term used to describe a conclusion arrived at on the basis of evidence and reasoning.