Help please:)
@Monica75 im so sorry, im terrible at math ;c
You confused me with my tag XD
I think @Fransisco_w got this :D
Deductive reasoning is a logical process in which a conclusion drawn from a set of premises contains no more information than the premises taken collectively. All dogs are animals; this is a dog; therefore, this is an animal: The truth of the conclusion is dependent only on the method. Inductive reasoning (as opposed to deductive reasoning) is reasoning in which the premises seek to supply strong evidence for (not absolute proof of) the truth of the conclusion. These are googles definitions, so your going to have to put them in your own words. As for similarities and differences here they are: Inductive reasoning is mainly probability's while deductive is more of absolute. Inductive can introduce new information while deductive doest. Both derive conclusions from their premises. Hope this helped :)
WOW THANK U!:)
THANKS @Fransisco_w
and @undeadknight26 & @GabbyCakes for your time
Muy bein!
Np and i just learned about this through google searches to help you. Some googling can go a long way! Have a nice day!
@Monica75 yay ^.^ @lopezking1 @coolj82 @ilovehim121511 Help her?
i got it thanks:)^
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