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Monday, September 29, 2008

Inductive order

Inductive order is a patter of organization wherein particulars are presented first leading on to a generalization. In this arrangement the "topic sentence " of the paragraph or the " main idea " is expressed in finals statement, where it makes a especial impression on to the reader, who is accestoned to the more usual order which places it first. Inductive Order : This is where the evidence is allowed to build its own overall picture. This is a history based approach. The argument order is used in persuasion, because small points are raised first and the points are allowed to get more and more compelling, something to do with communication. Induction is the name given to a certain kind of proof, and also to a (related) way of defining a function. For a proof, the statement to be proved has a suitably ordered set of cases. Some cases (usually one, but possibly zero or more than one), are proved separately, and the other cases are deduced from those. The deduction goes by contradiction, as we shall see. For a function, its domain is suitably ordered.

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