DEDUCTIVE REASONING

Deductive reasoning is the process of reasoning from multiple statements (premises) to reach a logically certain conclusion. It is sometimes referred to as top-down logic which actually a counterpart to inductive reasoning, which highlights bottom-up logic. Where deductive reasoning proceeds from general premises to a specific conclusion, inductive reasoning proceeds from specific premises to a general conclusion.

Exhibit A
  Alison Ackroyd. Pinterest. STEM Teaching


Now, let's bring humor into this learning, shall we? Check these out!




































Exhibit B 
Undistributed Middle Term. Retrieved from http://www.fallacyfiles.org/undismid.html





Exhibit C
Nina Paley. (1997, Oct 8). Fluff

Exhibit D
Posted by John Kranz (March 11, 2009)


INDUCTIVE REASONING VS DEDUCTIVE REASONING


                                                                                   
Dr.Deborah Gabriel. (2013, March 13). Inductive and Deductive Approaches to Research


  
                                                                                                 
Shmoop. (2013, Jun 14) Inductive vs Deductive Reasoning.

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