Deduction

views updated Jun 11 2018

DEDUCTION

Deduction is a type of reasoning whereby a person concludes from one or more given premises to a proposition that is their necessary and logical consequent (see ar gumentation; syllogism). The term is of recent origin in the history of logic, its French equivalent appearing only in the last edition (1835) of the Dictionnaire de l'Académie française. aristotle characterizes a certain type of argument as παγωγή, which is rendered into Latin as deductio but is better translated into English as reduction; the argument known as reductio ad impossibile is of this type (Anal. pr. 29b 6; see also ibid. 69a 20). Again, thomas aquinas uses the term deductio in at least four different senses, none of which has the precise modern signification [see L. Schütz, ThomasLexikon (2d ed. Paderborn 1895; repr. Stuttgart 1958) 203]. I. kant speaks too of a transcendental deduction as part of his transcendental method. see transcendental (kant ian). Modern logicians sometimes oppose deduction to induction on the basis that the first concludes from the general to the particular, whereas the second concludes from the particular to the general; this characterization is inaccurate, however, since deduction need not conclude to the particular and its process is far from being the logical inverse of the inductive procedure (see induction; demonstration). For specific teachings on deduction, see R. eisler, Wörterbuch der philosophischen Begriffe, 3 v. (4th ed. Berlin 192730) 1:245247.

See Also: logic, symbolic.

[r. houde]

deduction

views updated May 21 2018

de·duc·tion / diˈdəkshən/ • n. 1. the action of deducting or subtracting something: the dividend will be paid without deduction of tax. ∎  an amount that is or may be deducted from something, esp. from taxable income or tax to be paid: tax deductions.2. the inference of particular instances by reference to a general law or principle: the detective must uncover the murderer by deduction from facts. Often contrasted with induction. ∎  a conclusion that has been deduced.

deduction

views updated May 21 2018

deduction, deductive The use of logical rules to arrive at a set of premisses from which certain conclusions must follow. Deduction begins with theory, moves to hypotheses derived from the theory, and then tests hypotheses via prediction and observations. This approach to testing and theory is often referred to as the hypothetico-deductive method, and since it emphasizes hypotheses, prediction, and testing, is sometimes held to be the method par excellence of science. See also INDUCTION.

deduction

views updated May 14 2018

deduction A formal method of logical inference. Deduction is the process of applying one or more inference rules to a given set of facts (known as axioms) and inferring new facts. Unlike the other methods of inference, abduction and induction, deduction produces logically sound results, i.e. involves no uncertainty.

Deduction

views updated May 23 2018

DEDUCTION

That which is deducted; the part taken away; abatement; as in deductions from gross income in arriving at net income for tax purposes.

Incivil law, a portion or thing that an heir has a right to take from the mass of the succession before any partition takes place.

A contribution to a charity can be used as a deduction to reduce income for income tax purposes if the taxpayer meets the requirements imposed by law.