| deduction |
The process of gaining knowledge independently of experience, through pure logical reasoning. This knowledge is deductive knowledge, or a priori knowledge. Of the spheres of human reasoning, only mathematics can truly be said to be deductive.
Ãâó: www.elliotcross.com/glossary.html
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| deduction |
arguing from a general principle-to a specific case. Opposite of induction which argues from specific cases or data to a general conclusion.
Ãâó: www.tmsdebate.org/main/forensics/glossary.htm
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| deduction |
A deduction has two aspects. First, it is a mental conclusion (as in "to deduce") reached during a remote-viewing session. It represents logical mental analysis that may or may not be correct. Second, a deduction is a subtraction from the flow of data. The procedures of Scientific Remote Viewing require that a viewer declare (and thus rid the mind of) all deductions. ...
Ãâó: www.farsight.org/SRV/vocab.html
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| deduction |
The amount that one is able to subtract from their income reported for tax purposes
Ãâó: www.free-credit-report-info.com/credit_glossary.ht...
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| deduction |
An inference from a set of propositions, or premises, to another proposition, or conclusion, that must be true if the premises are true.
Ãâó: info1.nwmissouri.edu/~rfield/gloss.HTML
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