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deductive - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of deductive in Hindi

  • वियोजक
  • निगमनिक
  • निगमनात्‍मक
  • वियोजक

deductive Definition

Adjective

  • characterized by or based on the inference of particular instances from a general law.

deductive Example

  • I used my deductive powers ( मैंने अपनी निगमनात्मक शक्तियों का प्रयोग किया )
  • He lectured on logic, deductive and inductive, systematic psychology and ethical theory. ( उन्होंने तर्क, निगमनात्मक और आगमनात्मक, व्यवस्थित मनोविज्ञान और नैतिक सिद्धांत पर व्याख्यान दिया। )
  • Hence, without his saying it in so many words, Aristotle's logic perforce became a logic of deductive reasoning, or syllogism. ( इसलिए, इतने सारे शब्दों में उनके कहने के बिना, अरस्तू का तर्क बल निगमनात्मक तर्क, या न्यायवाद का तर्क बन गया। )
  • If their view is correct, the theory appears to be a remarkable example of deductive reasoning. ( यदि उनका विचार सही है, तो सिद्धांत निगमनात्मक तर्क का एक उल्लेखनीय उदाहरण प्रतीत होता है। )

More Sentence

  • On the whole, then, analogical, inductive and deductive inferences are not the same but three similar and closely connected processes.
  • By his method of observation and induction as thus explained, his philosophy will be found to be marked off very clearly, on the one hand from the deductive construction of notions of an absolute system, as represented either by Schelling or Hegel, which Cousin regards as based simply on hypothesis and abstraction, illegitimately obtained; and on the other, from that of Kant, and in a sense, of Sir W.
  • These attempts at the unification of algebra, and its separation from other branches of mathematics, have usually been accompanied by an attempt to base it, as a deductive science, on certain fundamental laws or general rules; and this has tended to increase its difficulty.
  • More particularly by the confusion in which he left the relation between the two logical principles of identity and of sufficient reason underlying respectively analytic and synthetic, deductive and inductive thought, he may be said to have undermined in another way the idealism he strove to establish.
  • He asserts that in Scotland the inductive method was unknown, and that although Smith spent some of the most important years of his youth in England, where the inductive method was supreme, he yet adopted the deductive method because it was habitually followed in Scotland.
  • That Smith does, however, largely employ the deductive method is certain; and that method is legitimate when the premises from which the deduction sets out are known universal facts of human nature and properties of external objects.
  • deductive reasoning