No very distinct accounts indeed of his method have survived; but we are certain that he formed it on scientific principles, deduced from philosophical reasoning, with which Vinci was familiar in every branch.
I experimented extensively with these three dogs during my stay, and deduced therefrom some conclusions which were inevitable.
It does not detract from his character and honesty, nor lessen the value of his labours, to admit that he may have been mistaken in some conclusions which he deduced from the great store of facts at his command.
Monkeys reason from cause to effect, communicate to others the conclusion deduced therefrom, and act in accordance therewith.
Materials have come to it from without, but of what use would they have been without that living fire of activity which transformed them and deduced from them new and valuable products?
It is difficult to understand precisely what Kant means in this passage, and it seems very doubtful whether he understood it himself; however, let us see what can be deduced from it against the permanence of the soul.
The consequence is illegitimate; all that could logically be deduced is, that certain phenomena appear and are continued in the soul without the concurrence of our will.
To say that one serves for all is to say that there is a general principal, independent of experience, since, without recognizing an intrinsic necessity in this truth, the universal could in no other way be deduced from the particular.
For our own part, we ingenuously confess, that we can discover no more solid, more conclusive, or more clear proof of the existence of God, than that deduced from the world of intelligences.
By these examples, it is clearly shown how a passage is to be read, and thence is deduced a rule or principle that all similar passages are to be read in a similar manner.
The definitions and rules in the Sequel are deducedfrom illustrations in the First Part.
In this respect there is a great difference between rules drawn from experience and rules deduced a priori.
Were there not another document on the subject in existence," says he, "the facts thus deduced from the census of England are sufficient to demonstrate the position, that the fecundity of human beings varies inversely as their numbers.
Their ordinary rules of morality are deduced from extreme cases.
But what should we think of a physician who should now tell us that he deduced his treatment of yellow fever from the general theory of pathology?
If our notions are fantastical, the whole structure falls to the ground; but they are for the most part improperly abstracted and deduced from things.
They are children of time and are formed insensibly by the collection of the methods pointed out by experience, and at a later day by the principles deduced from the combination of these methods.
This sensation I can yet remember very distinctly, and from various observations have deduced the conclusion that the limits of pleasure are not, as yet, either known or defined, and that we do not know how far the body may be beatified.
From this and other observations, I deduced the following conclusion: Champagne, the first effect of which is exhilarating, in the result is stupefying, on account of the excessant carbonic gases it contains.
One evening his excellency was informed of the idea I had deduced from his face.
From all this they deduced a lofty theory which embraces all mankind, and all that portion of creation which may be animalized.
The strict regulations which have been framed by the wisdom of modern legislators to restrain the wealth and avarice of the clergy, may be originally deducedfrom the example of the emperor Valentinian.
Let us now turn to the record of creation as given in the Sacred Scriptures--the Mosaic Cosmogony--and see how that account conforms to the laws which on logical grounds we have deduced as the Laws of the Divine Manifestation.
From this I deduced that the strength of the wind must have increased rather than fallen off, as had been prophesied in the report of the meteorological expert at St. John's.
But, deduced as they now are from a matrix within our own minds, they cannot reasonably fear any assaults of scepticism.
He told his reader that certain disputed ideas were not deduced thus and thus.
Observe that in verse 22 the universality of the redemption which is in Christ is deduced from the universality of sin.
To him the morality of the Gospel was all deduced from the life of Christ the Son of God as our Example, and from His death for us which touches men's hearts and makes obedience to Him our joyful answer to what He has done for us.
Therefore these axioms have no reasons, and can neither be deducednor proved.
This we saw (ยง 4) is really a mistake: mathematical proofs are really hypothetical, and deduced from the initial postulates and definitions.
He had also, in his famous Researches into the Skull of the Vertebrata (1872), deduced the younger skull of the tetrapods from the oldest cranial form among the fishes, that of the shark.
He first deduced various consequences from this assumed hypothesis, and examined whether all of them were consistent or inconsistent with each other.
From the quality of the thud which had told of the intruder's drop from the trap to the floor, Kerry had deducedthat he wore rubber-soled shoes.
It must therefore be sought for by a process of abstraction, and it ought to be deduced from the simple possibility of a nature both sensuous and rational; in short, beauty ought to present itself as a necessary condition of humanity.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "deduced" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.