Maria
Shawn
booboo penis
This depends on the specific premises and conclusion being evaluated. In general, premises that provide strong and relevant evidence in support of the conclusion can be considered sufficient. However, if there are logical gaps or missing information in the premises that weaken the connection to the conclusion, then the premises may not be sufficient. Critical analysis is necessary to determine whether the premises adequately support the conclusion.
Is the information your reviewing provided or your own? Does the appearance support the hypothesis or the evidence? Ever heard of devils advocat?
A theory is something that you have evidence to support what you think, a conclustion is something you make after an experimant concluding what you have found out.
Drawing Conclusions
Using evidence to support a conclusion. cheers.
The author proves he's biased when he uses terms like "silly" and "stupid" -Apex- :)
booboo penis
A supported inference when you draw a conclusion about something using evidence. The evidence is the support for what you have inferred.
There is no evidence to support this conclusion.
Paco and Eva's data showed a clear trend that supported my conclusion. Their findings aligned with my hypothesis and provided additional evidence to support the validity of the conclusion drawn. The consistency between our data reinforced the strength of the conclusion reached.
There is no evidence in the text to support that conclusion, nor is it part of Jewish or Christian tradition.
Determining new research goals ------APEX
Using evidence to support opinions
This depends on the specific premises and conclusion being evaluated. In general, premises that provide strong and relevant evidence in support of the conclusion can be considered sufficient. However, if there are logical gaps or missing information in the premises that weaken the connection to the conclusion, then the premises may not be sufficient. Critical analysis is necessary to determine whether the premises adequately support the conclusion.
arbitrary inference
i have the same question!