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Published byPeregrine Green Modified over 9 years ago
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Inductive/Dedu ctive Reasoning Using reasoning in math and science
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Inductive Reasoning Process of reasoning that a rule or statement is true based on a pattern. You can draw a conclusion from a pattern called a Conjecture. A Conjecture is a statement you believe to be true based on inductive reasoning.
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Example The product of an even number and an odd number is _______ List some examples and look for a pattern 2(3)= 62(5)=10 4(3)=12 Product of even and odd number is ____
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Counterexample To show a conjecture is always true, you have to prove it. To show that a conjecture is false, you only have to find one example in which the conjecture isn’t true. This is called the Counterexample
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Examples Every pair of supplementary angles includes one obtuse angle. Is there a counterexample that disproves this statement?
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Conditional Statements Can be written in the form p q An “if then” statements The Hypothesis is followed by “if” The conclusion is followed by “then”
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Example Hypothesis: A number is an integer. It is a natural number. If a number is an integer, Then it is a natural number. Analyze the truth value of the statement. Is the hypothesis always true? Can you find a counterexample to disprove it?
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Related Conditionals Hypothesis – P q Converse- flipping hypothesis and conclusion q p Inverse- Negate the hypothesis and conclusion -p -q Contrapositive – switch and negate hypothesis and conclusion -q -p
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Truth Value Need to test the truth value of all statements. Example: If I have a cold then I am sick. If I’m sick then I have a cold If I don’t have a cold then I’m not sick If I’m not sick then I don’t have a cold.
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