English, asked by sayamtiwari, 29 days ago

When you argue from general principle and arriving at particular facts is called...​

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Answered by Rameshjangid
1

When you argue from general principle and arriving at particular facts is called inductive argument.

  • Arguments can be classified into two categories: deductive and inductive.
  • While an inductive argument proceeds from a general statement to a specific case, a deductive one proceeds from the general statement to the specific case.
  • An inductive argument starts with specific situations and ends up with a universal principle, but this does not guarantee the conclusion.
  • It develops a theory that the individual facts might support but that might also turn out to be wrong.
  • Inductive Arguments' Strength,Spot, Rover, and Fido are all dogs, and it is true that they all have four legs, but it is not true that all dogs have four legs. (Some just have three.) The general principle is therefore a hypothesis supported by data, but one that needs to be established.

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