Induction starts with particulars, and asks the question, "To what general truth do these separate facts lead?
Deduction must have inductionto furnish the facts for its premises; induction must have deduction to organize these separate facts into a unified body of knowledge.
It is of course evident from the relation of induction and deduction that the child's natural mode of learning a subject is by induction.
The contention that dread in a group is increased to enormous proportions by means of induction (contagion) is not in the least contradicted by these remarks.
McDougall for a moment gives us an impression that his principle of 'primitive induction of emotion' might enable us to do without the assumption of suggestion.
The manner in which individuals are thus carried away by a common impulse is explained by McDougall by means of what he calls the 'principle of direct induction of emotion by way of the primitive sympathetic response' (p.
Page of Washington and Ruhmkorff of Paris each made a machine, well known as the Ruhmkorff coil, by which intense electro-magnetic currents by induction were produced.
All alleged induction is either disguised deduction or a lucky guess.
It is in Aristotle's statement of induction and the process of definition that we appreciate most clearly the inadequacy of their method.
His induction involves a gathering of individuals rather than of data.
The identification of induction and procedure by hypothesis occurs on p.
Faraday first showed that electrostatic induction was not action at a distance, but took place by means of the insulating medium separating the two conductors.
Evidently because the mechanic was not content with so careless a mode ofinduction as served the purpose of the philosopher.
In what then does this induction differ from the induction which leads us to the conclusion that the presence of the sun is the cause of our having more light by day than by night?
Bacon stirred up men to pursue an object which could be attained only by induction, and by inductioncarefully performed; and consequently induction was more carefully performed.
Careful induction is not at all necessary to the making of a good syllogism.
The very infant, we imagine, is led by induction to expect milk from his mother or nurse, and none from his father.
Here is an induction corresponding with Bacon's analysis and ending in a monstrous absurdity.
True, it is a very small basis, but still it is enough to make an induction from; you generalize the facts, and you expect to find sourness in apples where you get hardness and greenness.
The first of these laws is universal and irreversible; the second is an induction from a vast number of observations, though it may possibly, and even probably, have to admit of exceptions.
The principal induction from the evidence is that man is descended from some less highly organized form.
The Ruhmkorff induction coil has in late years been greatly improved both by Tesla and Elihu Thomson, who, separately and independently of each other, have produced excellent forms of high-frequency induction coils.
Induction coils and their use in producing the Röntgen rays.
Fortunately, these difficulties were overcome by the genius of Nikola Tesla, in the invention of the multiphase alternating-current motor, or the induction motor, as it is now generally called.
This coincidence would give to the induction a very high degree of probability, even were it not enforced by deduction.
This general induction is re-enforced by especial induction.
As early as 1842, Masson and Bréguet constructed an induction coil by means of which minute sparks could be obtained from the secondary, in vacuo.
In 1851, Ruhmkorff constructed an induction coil so greatly improved, by the careful insulation of its secondary circuit, that he could obtain from it torrents of long sparks in ordinary air.
He explained the mechanism and motions of the universe by the grandest induction of the human mind.
It seems then to be a fair induction from the facts before us that earnest religion does in some way modify human depravity so as to make continuous Association possible, and insure to it great material success.
With us induction is first; deduction second; and verification by facts or the logic of events, always and everywhere the supreme check on both.
It is no induction of logic that has transfixed the heart of the victim of deep remorse, when he withers beneath an influence unseen by human eye, and shrinks from the anticipation of a reckoning to come.
The fair induction is, in both instances, the opposite.
In such a state of mind, therefore, it follows, by an induction which cannot be controverted, either that the evil is irremediable and hopeless, or that we must look for a power from without the mind which may afford an adequate remedy.
He neither preferred accusations, nor pronounced absolutions: but it was impossible to shut his eyes upon facts, and to close up his reason against the induction of inevitable inferences.
A fair induction from these recognized facts, in their sweep and significance, would seem to indicate, as the origin of this primitive rite, the covenant union between the first pair in their instituting of the family relation.
Here once more we are in the presence of a deduction, and not of an induction that represents the actual facts in the case.
Once more, as in the case of the supposed failure of surgery to develop during the Middle Ages, it is a deduction that has been made from certain supposed principles, and not an induction from the actual facts as we know them.
The induction in this matter--that is, the story of the actual history of science in the Middle Ages--is the direct contradiction of the deduction from false principles.
Induction in the genuine significance of the word had been recognized in the world long before Bacon's time and been used to much better effect than he was able to apply it.
The purpose of this Sutra is, to distinguish between the mental process of predication, and observation, induction or testimony.
This may be simply an interplay of thoughts, without the presence of the object thought of; or the things thought of may be imaginary or unreal; while observation, induction and testimony always go back to an object.
Another play acted by the King's men was Marston's Malcontent, with an Induction by Webster, in which the reason of its appearance is explained.
The Induction with Night and the Furies is quite in Kyd's manner.
This Induction was, I think, greatly altered by Shakespeare in 1603.
Drayton's first connection with the Chamberlain's company was in my opinion his writing the Induction for The Taming of the Shrew in 1596, afterwards altered by Shakespeare.
We have yet to indicate the various ways in which induction may be used.
In addition we have to bear in mind that induction is intimately related to analogy.
If I am still in doubt whether the fact on which a moment ago I depended as the sufficient condition for a judgment may still be so regarded, the induction is uncertain.
This is the type of scientific induction and it requires further, the addition of certainty and accuracy.
If they are brief, it is because the dramatist wants to move as quickly as possible from his induction or prologue to his main story, or knows that when the play proper is ended, he cannot with his epilogue hold his audience long.
We should find different names for these divisions,--perhaps, Induction and Finale?
The first of these is a portable apparatus designed for lighting gas burners, and is based upon the calorific properties of the electric spark produced by the induction bobbin.