Search for "Reasoning" in article titles:

  1. Reasoning: Reasoning is the human effort to organize concrete facts and abstract logical principles in an effort to arrive at reliable conclusions. Reasoning can either be good or poor. [100%] 2023-02-18 [Logic]
  2. Reasoning: There are three basic ways of gaining information about the world: inductive reasoning, deductive reasoning, and abductive reasoning. Abductive reasoning involves Occam's razor where observations are made, and one tries to find the simplest — and therefore most likely cause. [100%] 2023-12-21 [Logic]
  3. Digital Reasoning: Digital Reasoning is an American company headquartered in Franklin, Tennessee. It offers cognitive computing services to intelligence agencies, financial institutions and healthcare organizations in the United States. (Company) [70%] 2024-01-12
  4. Non-Verbal Reasoning: In non-verbal reasoning (NVR) diagrams are used for expressing the ideas instead of using numbers and words. Non-verbal reasoning shows a series of figures arranged in a sequence or pattern and then the missing figure is required to ... (Philosophy) [70%] 2023-08-16 [Reasoning] [Educational psychology]...
  5. Reasoning system: In information technology a reasoning system is a software system that generates conclusions from available knowledge using logical techniques such as deduction and induction. Reasoning systems play an important role in the implementation of artificial intelligence and knowledge-based systems. [70%] 2023-11-23 [Deductive reasoning] [Problem solving]...
  6. Moral Reasoning: —Knowing what to do Moral Reasoning is the thought process we go through to determine what we ought to do. Moral reasoning helps us decide what is right and what is wrong. [70%] 2024-01-26 [Life skills] [Applied Wisdom]...
  7. Moral Reasoning: While moral reasoning can be undertaken on another’s behalf, it is paradigmatically an agent’s first-personal (individual or collective) practical reasoning about what, morally, they ought to do. Philosophical examination of moral reasoning faces both distinctive puzzles – about ... (Philosophy) [70%] 2022-07-23
  8. Defeasible Reasoning: Reasoning is defeasible when the corresponding argument is rationally compelling but not deductively valid. The truth of the premises of a good defeasible argument provide support for the conclusion, even though it is possible for the premises to be true ... (Philosophy) [70%] 2021-12-25
  9. Moral Reasoning: —Knowing what to do Moral Reasoning is the thought process we go through to determine what we ought to do. Moral reasoning helps us decide what is right and what is wrong. [70%] 2023-12-17 [Life skills] [Applied Wisdom]...
  10. Automated Reasoning: Reasoning is the ability to make inferences, and automated reasoning is concerned with the building of computing systems that automate this process. Although the overall goal is to mechanize different forms of reasoning, the term has largely been identified with ... (Philosophy) [70%] 2021-12-28
  11. Technical Reasoning: Welcome to technical reasoning! This course discusses many aspects of logic and reasoning used in the technical sciences. [70%] 2024-03-14
  12. Digital Reasoning: Digital Reasoning was an American company headquartered in Franklin, Tennessee. It offered cognitive computing services to intelligence agencies, financial institutions and healthcare organizations in the United States. (American cognitive computing company) [70%] 2024-10-11 [Defunct software companies of the United States] [Companies based in Franklin, Tennessee]...
  13. Reason; Reasonable; Reasoning: REASON; REASONABLE; REASONING re'-z'n, re'-z'n-a-b'l, re'-z'n-ing (yakhach, etc.; logos, dialogizomai, -ismos, etc.): "Reason" with related terms, has a diversity of meanings, representing a large number of Hebrew and Greek words ... [57%] 1915-01-01
  14. Figure Reasoning Test: The Figure Reasoning Test (FRT) is an intelligence test created by John Clifford Daniels in the late 1940s. It is used by a few Mensa chapters in Europe for their admissions tests. [57%] 2024-01-26 [Intelligence tests]
  15. Figure Reasoning Test: The Figure Reasoning Test (FRT) is an intelligence test created by John Clifford Daniels in the late 1940s. It is used by a few Mensa chapters in Europe for their admissions tests. [57%] 2023-07-20 [Intelligence tests]
  16. Attacking Faulty Reasoning: Attacking Faulty Reasoning is a textbook on logical fallacies by T. Edward Damer that has been used for many years in a number of college courses on logic, critical thinking, argumentation, and philosophy. (Philosophy) [57%] 2023-09-19 [Philosophy books]
  17. Qualitative Reasoning Group: The Qualitative Reasoning Group (QRG) at Northwestern University, led by Ken Forbus conducts artificial intelligence and cognitive science research on qualitative representations and reasoning, as well as analogical reasoning and learning. The analogy work has led to the structure mapping ... (Philosophy) [57%] 2023-02-17 [Reasoning]
  18. Not Circular Reasoning: Jonathan Sarfati, of CMI, in the September 2008 issue of CMI's Creation magazine, made an attempt to argue his way out of the circle pictured below. In typical Sarfati style, what he writes is so off the wall that ... [57%] 2023-12-22 [Creationism] [Fallacious arguments]...
  19. Association for Automated Reasoning: The Association for Automated Reasoning (AAR) is a non-profit corporation that serves as an association of researchers working on automated theorem proving, automated reasoning, and related fields. It organizes the CADE and IJCAR conferences and publishes a roughly quarterly ... (Organization) [50%] 2022-06-29 [Computer science organizations]
  20. Journal of Automated Reasoning: The Journal of Automated Reasoning was established in 1983 by Larry Wos, who was its editor in chief until 1992. It covers research and advances in automated reasoning – mechanical verification of theorems and other deductions in classical and non-classical ... [50%] 2022-04-22 [Computer science journals] [Logic in computer science]...
  21. Mathematics and Plausible Reasoning: Mathematics and Plausible Reasoning is a two-volume book by the mathematician George Pólya describing various methods for being a good guesser of new mathematical results. In the Preface to Volume 1 of the book Pólya exhorts all interested students ... [50%] 2022-11-16 [Mathematics books] [Reasoning]...
  22. Analogy and Analogical Reasoning: An analogy is a comparison between two objects, or systems of objects, that highlights respects in which they are thought to be similar. Analogical reasoning is any type of thinking that relies upon an analogy. (Philosophy) [50%] 2022-01-28
  23. Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Knowledge can be represented within the machine environment using several different approaches. The most common approach is with propositional calculus or with first order predicate calculus. [50%] 2023-12-17 [Artificial intelligence]
  24. Mathematics and Plausible Reasoning: Mathematics and Plausible Reasoning is a two-volume book by the mathematician George Pólya describing various methods for being a good guesser of new mathematical results. In the Preface to Volume 1 of the book Pólya exhorts all interested students ... [50%] 2023-08-11 [Mathematics books] [Reasoning]...
  25. International Journal of Approximate Reasoning: The International Journal of Approximate Reasoning (IJAR) is a peer-reviewed academic journal in operations research. It was founded in 1987 by Jim Bezdek, and is published on a monthly basis by Elsevier, with Thierry Denoeux as its Editor-in ... [44%] 2024-01-21 [Mathematics journals] [Computer science journals]...
  26. Reasoning from the Scriptures Ministries: Reasoning from the Scriptures Ministries is a teaching and resource ministry based in Frisco, Texas that specializes in Christian apologetics, with a special focus on cults. The ministry is well known for researching and producing concise fact sheets, booklets and ... [44%] 2023-02-17 [Christian Apologetics]
  27. International Journal of Approximate Reasoning: The International Journal of Approximate Reasoning (IJAR) is a peer-reviewed academic journal in operations research. It was founded in 1987 by Jim Bezdek, and is published on a monthly basis by Elsevier, with Thierry Denoeux as its Editor-in ... [44%] 2022-08-16 [Mathematics journals] [Computer science journals]...
  28. Interpretation and Coherence in Legal Reasoning: The subject of legal reasoning appears to occupy the more practical end of the spectrum of jurisprudential theorising. Surely if anything matters in our attempts to understand law, it matters how judges do and/or should decide cases, and that ... (Philosophy) [40%] 2022-02-20
  29. Precedent and Analogy in Legal Reasoning: Arguments from precedent and analogy are two central forms of reasoning found in many legal systems, especially ‘Common Law’ systems such as those in England and the United States. Precedent involves an earlier decision being followed in a later case ... (Philosophy) [40%] 2021-12-24
  30. International Joint Conference on Automated Reasoning: The International Joint Conference on Automated Reasoning (IJCAR) is a series of conferences on the topics of automated reasoning, automated deduction, and related fields. It is organized semi-regularly as a merger of other meetings. (Conferences series on automated reasoning, automated deduction, and related fields) [40%] 2024-03-16 [Theoretical computer science conferences] [Logic conferences]...
  31. Emotional reasoning: Emotional reasoning is a cognitive process by which an individual concludes that their emotional reaction proves something is true, despite contrary empirical evidence. Emotional reasoning creates an 'emotional truth', which may be in direct conflict with the inverse 'perceptional truth ... (Philosophy) [70%] 2023-08-26 [Cognitive biases] [Reasoning]...
  32. Inductive reasoning: Inductive reasoning is a method of reasoning in which a general principle is derived from a body of observations. It consists of making broad generalizations based on specific observations. (Philosophy) [70%] 2023-10-17 [Inductive reasoning] [Arguments]...
  33. Moral reasoning: Moral reasoning is the study of how people think about right and wrong and how they acquire and apply moral rules. It is a subdiscipline of moral psychology that overlaps with moral philosophy, and is the foundation of descriptive ethics. (Philosophy) [70%] 2023-12-12 [Educational psychology] [Reasoning]...
  34. Principled reasoning: Principled reasoning (also known as principles-based reasoning and principle-centered reasoning) is an alternative to modern portfolio theory based on a different conception of risk. Modern portfolio theory, according to its founder, Harry Markowitz, equates risk with "variance of ... (Finance) [70%] 2023-10-17 [Financial economics] [Finance theories]...
  35. Verbal reasoning: Verbal reasoning is understanding and reasoning using concepts framed in words. It aims at evaluating ability to think constructively, rather than at simple fluency or vocabulary recognition. (Philosophy) [70%] 2023-10-25 [Reasoning]
  36. Plausible reasoning: Plausible reasoning is a method of deriving new conclusions from given known premises, a method different from the classical syllogistic argumentation methods of Aristotelian two-valued logic. The syllogistic style of argumentation is illustrated by the oft-quoted argument "All ... (Philosophy) [70%] 2023-11-12 [Non-classical logic]
  37. Liberal reasoning: Liberal reasoning is frequently irrational and biased. In his article "Why People Are Irrational About Politics" Michael Huemer writes.. [70%] 2023-02-23 [Liberalism]
  38. Principled reasoning: Principled reasoning (also known as principles-based reasoning and principle-centered reasoning) is an alternative to modern portfolio theory based on a different conception of risk. Modern portfolio theory, according to its founder, Harry Markowitz, equates risk with "variance of ... (Mathematical framework) [70%] 2023-10-04 [Financial economics] [Finance theories]...
  39. Inductive reasoning: Inductive reasoning is a method of reasoning in which a body of observations is synthesized to come up with a general principle. Inductive reasoning is distinct from deductive reasoning. (Method of logical reasoning) [70%] 2022-03-31 [Inductive reasoning] [Arguments]...
  40. Scriptural reasoning: Scriptural Reasoning ("SR") is one type of interdisciplinary, interfaith scriptural reading. It is an evolving practice in which Christians, Jews, Muslims, and sometimes members of other faiths, meet to study their sacred scriptures together, and to explore the ways in ... (Philosophy) [70%] 2022-04-02 [Reasoning]
  41. Diagrammatic reasoning: Diagrammatic reasoning is reasoning by means of visual representations. The study of diagrammatic reasoning is about the understanding of concepts and ideas, visualized with the use of diagrams and imagery instead of by linguistic or algebraic means. [70%] 2023-10-17 [Cognition] [Diagrams]...
  42. Diagrammatic reasoning: Diagrammatic reasoning is reasoning by means of visual representations. The study of diagrammatic reasoning is about the understanding of concepts and ideas, visualized with the use of diagrams and imagery instead of by linguistic or algebraic means. [70%] 2024-01-26 [Cognition] [Diagrams]...
  43. Visual reasoning: Visual reasoning is the process of manipulating one's mental image of an object in order to reach a certain conclusion – for example, mentally constructing a piece of machinery to experiment with different mechanisms. In a frequently cited paper in ... [70%] 2024-01-26 [Cognition] [Reasoning]...
  44. Principled reasoning: Principled reasoning (also known as principles-based reasoning and principle-centered reasoning) is an alternative to modern portfolio theory based on a different conception of risk. Modern portfolio theory, according to its founder, Harry Markowitz, equates risk with "variance of ... (Mathematical framework) [70%] 2024-01-26 [Financial economics] [Finance theories]...
  45. Inductive reasoning: The term Inductive reasoning is used to refer to any method of reasoning in which broad generalizations or principles are derived from a body of observations. This article is concerned with the inductive reasoning other than deductive reasoning (such as ... (Method of logical reasoning) [70%] 2024-01-26 [Inductive reasoning] [Arguments]...
  46. Logical reasoning: Logical reasoning is a mental activity that aims to arrive at a conclusion in a rigorous way. It happens in the form of inferences or arguments by starting from a set of premises and reasoning to a conclusion supported by ... (Process of drawing correct inferences) [70%] 2023-11-05 [Reasoning] [Concepts in logic]...
  47. Inductive reasoning: Inductive reasoning is a type of reasoning in which a universal law or principle is established from repeated observations of the same phenomena. [70%] 2023-02-16 [Philosophy of Science]
  48. Abductive reasoning: Abductive reasoning (also called abduction, abductive inference, or retroduction) is a form of logical inference that seeks the simplest and most likely conclusion from a set of observations. It was formulated and advanced by American philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce beginning ... (Form of logical inference which seeks the simplest and most likely explanation) [70%] 2023-09-28 [Belief revision] [Bayesian statistics]...
  49. Abductive reasoning: Abduction, or inference to the best explanation, is a method of reasoning in which one chooses the hypothesis that would, if true, best explain the relevant evidence. Abductive reasoning starts from a set of accepted facts and infers most likely ... [70%] 2023-02-03
  50. Motivated reasoning: Motivated reasoning (motivational reasoning bias) is a cognitive and social response in which individuals, consciously or unconsciously, allow emotion-loaded motivational biases to affect how new information is perceived. Individuals tend to favor evidence that coincides with their current beliefs ... (Using emotionally-biased reasoning to produce justifications or make decisions) [70%] 2023-10-12 [Cognitive biases] [Inductive fallacies]...
  51. Visual reasoning: Visual reasoning is the process of manipulating one's mental image of an object in order to reach a certain conclusion – for example, mentally constructing a piece of machinery to experiment with different mechanisms. In a frequently cited paper in ... [70%] 2023-10-09 [Cognition] [Reasoning]...
  52. Logical reasoning: Two kinds of logical reasoning are often distinguished in addition to formal deduction: induction and abduction. Given a precondition or premise, a conclusion or logical consequence and a rule or material conditional that implies the conclusion given the precondition, one ... (Philosophy) [70%] 2023-08-20 [Logic] [Reasoning]...
  53. Specious reasoning: Specious reasoning is any argument or analysis which has the apparent ring of truth or plausibility but is actually fallacious. Such arguments are attractive because they are seemingly well-reasoned or factual, but are either fallacious or insincere. [70%] 2023-03-03 [Philosophy] [Psychology]...
  54. Scriptural reasoning: Scriptural Reasoning ("SR") is one type of interdisciplinary, interfaith scriptural reading. It is an evolving practice of diverse methodologies in which Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, Baháʼís, and members of other faiths, meet in groups to study their sacred ... (Religion) [70%] 2023-07-01 [Reasoning]

external From search of external encyclopedias:

0