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  1. Deduction: Deduction, a term used in common parlance for the process of taking away from, or subtracting, and specially for the argumentative process of arriving at a conclusion from evidence, i. In this sense it includes both arguments from particular facts ... [100%] 2022-09-02
  2. Deduction: In traditional Aristotelian logic, deduction or deductive reasoning is inference in which the premises, if true, purport to guarantee the truth of the conclusion, as opposed to abductive and inductive reasoning, where the premises are offered as giving some evidence ... [100%] 2023-02-03
  3. Deductible: In an insurance policy, the deductible (in British English, the excess) is the amount paid out of pocket by the policy holder before an insurance provider will pay any expenses. In general usage, the term deductible may be used to ... (Finance) [100%] 2023-09-25 [Insurance]
  4. Deduction: In traditional Aristotelian logic, deduction or deductive reasoning is inference in which the premises, if true, purport to guarantee the truth of the conclusion, as opposed to abductive and inductive reasoning, where the premises are offered as giving some evidence ... [100%] 2023-02-04
  5. Detective (upcoming film): Detective is an upcoming Bangladeshi 3D computer animated fantasy-suspense film 3D directed by Tapan Ahmed and produced by Jaaz Multimedia. The film is based on Rabindranath Tagore's 1898 short story with the same name. (Upcoming film) [100%] 2022-09-26 [Bengali-language Bangladeshi films] [2010s fantasy films]...
  6. Deduction: In traditional Aristotelian logic, deduction or deductive reasoning is inference in which the premises, if true, purport to guarantee the truth of the conclusion, as opposed to abductive and inductive reasoning, where the premises are offered as giving some evidence ... [100%] 2023-02-04
  7. Detective: An investigator who is typically employed by a law enforcement agency is referred to as a detective. Conversations with witnesses and confidential informants, the gathering of physical evidence, and database searches are common ways for them to get information that ... [100%] 2024-01-11 [Police ranks] [Law enforcement]...
  8. Deduction: Deduction : Deduction is defined as inference from stated premises (see the article on argument). The reality of of a deductive inference is entirely dependant upon the reality of its premises. [100%] 2023-08-03
  9. Deduction: A deduction in formal logic is a way of proving a proposition. Specifically, when a conclusion is inferred from premises or facts, it is said to "follow" (like the water downstream to the spring source), from previously stated propositions via ... [100%] 2023-03-20 [Logic]
  10. Detective (1979 film): Detective (Russian: Сыщик) is a 1979 Soviet action film directed by Vladimir Fokin. Yevgeny Kulik, returning from the army, went to work in the militia. (1979 film) [100%] 2024-01-11 [1979 films] [1970s Russian-language films]...
  11. Detective: A detective is a person, usually employed in a state agency and sometimes by private parties, to investigate and solve crimes through the methods of crime scene forensics, ballistics, canvass questioning, surveillance, suspect interrogation, and the production of evidence for ... [100%] 2023-07-23
  12. Deductive classifier: A deductive classifier is a type of artificial intelligence inference engine. It takes as input a set of declarations in a frame language about a domain such as medical research or molecular biology. [90%] 2023-09-25 [Knowledge representation] [Classification algorithms]...
  13. Deductive Logic: —Tools for evaluating consistency Deductive logic provides a system of tools and techniques that allow the truth-values of certain classes of statements—known as propositions— to be evaluated for consistency. Beginning with propositions known to be true or false ... [90%] 2023-09-25 [Life skills] [Applied Wisdom]...
  14. Deductive reasoning: Deductive reasoning is the mental process of drawing deductive inferences. An inference is deductively valid if its conclusion follows logically from its premises, i.e. (Form of reasoning) [90%] 2023-09-25 [Deductive reasoning] [Logic]...
  15. Deductive closure: Peter D. Klein, in the second edition of The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, defines closure as follows: A set of objects, O, is said to exhibit closure or to be closed under a given operation, R, provided that for every ... [90%] 2023-08-09 [Epistemology] [Logic]...
  16. Deductive reasoning: Deductive reasoning is a type of reasoning in which a particular fact is deduced by applying a general law to another particular fact or case. [90%] 2023-03-07 [Philosophy of Science]
  17. Razonamiento deductivo: El razonamiento deductivo o deducción es el proceso de sacar inferencias deductivas. Una inferencia es deductivamente válida si su conclusión se sigue lógicamente de sus premisas, es decir, si es imposible que las premisas sean verdaderas y la conclusión falsa. [80%] 2023-12-19
  18. Peirce’s Deductive Logic: Charles Sanders Peirce was a philosopher, but it is not easy to classify him in philosophy because of the breadth of his work. (Please refer to the table of contents of the entry Charles Sanders Peirce.) Logic was one of ... (Philosophy) [74%] 2022-06-21
  19. Deductive-nomological model: The deductive-nomological model (DN model) of scientific explanation, also known as Hempel's model, the Hempel–Oppenheim model, the Popper–Hempel model, or the covering law model, is a formal view of scientifically answering questions asking, "Why...?". The DN ... (Scientific methodology) [74%] 2023-09-25 [Scientific method] [Philosophy of science]...
  20. Deductive lambda calculus: Deductive lambda calculus considers what happens when lambda terms are regarded as mathematical expressions. One interpretation of the untyped lambda calculus is as a programming language where evaluation proceeds by performing reductions on an expression until it is in normal ... [74%] 2023-09-25 [Lambda calculus]

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