Abductive reasoning  

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-'''Abduction''' is a method of logical inference introduced by [[Charles Sanders Peirce]] which comes prior to induction and deduction for which the colloquial name is to have a "hunch". Abductive reasoning starts when an inquirer considers of a set of seemingly unrelated [[fact]]s, armed with an intuition that they are somehow connected. The term ''abduction'' is commonly presumed to mean the same thing as [[hypothesis]]; however, an abduction is actually the process of inference that produces a hypothesis as its end result.+'''Abduction''' is a method of logical inference introduced by [[Charles Sanders Peirce]] which comes prior to induction and deduction for which the colloquial name is to have a "[[hunch]]". Abductive reasoning starts when an inquirer considers of a set of seemingly unrelated [[fact]]s, armed with an intuition that they are somehow connected. The term ''abduction'' is commonly presumed to mean the same thing as [[hypothesis]]; however, an abduction is actually the process of inference that produces a hypothesis as its end result.
 +==See also==
 +<div style="-moz-column-count:3; column-count:3;">
 +*[[Abductive logic programming]]
 +*[[Analogy]]
 +*[[Analysis of Competing Hypotheses]]
 +*[[Charles Sanders Peirce]]
 +*[[Charles Sanders Peirce bibliography]]
 +*[[Deductive reasoning]]
 +*[[Defeasible reasoning]]
 +*[[Doug Walton]]
 +*[[Gregory Bateson]]
 +*[[Inductive reasoning]]
 +*[[Inquiry]]
 +*[[Portal:thinking#Topics related to Thinking|List of thinking-related topics]]
 +*[[Logic]]
 +*[[Subjective logic]]
 +*[[Logical reasoning]]
 +*[[Maximum likelihood]]
 +*[[Scientific method]]
 +*[[Sherlock Holmes]]
 +*[[Sign relation]]
 +</div>
 + 
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Abduction is a method of logical inference introduced by Charles Sanders Peirce which comes prior to induction and deduction for which the colloquial name is to have a "hunch". Abductive reasoning starts when an inquirer considers of a set of seemingly unrelated facts, armed with an intuition that they are somehow connected. The term abduction is commonly presumed to mean the same thing as hypothesis; however, an abduction is actually the process of inference that produces a hypothesis as its end result.

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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Abductive reasoning" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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