Introduction to Inductive and Deductive Reasoning | Infinity Learn

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
  • 🎯NEET 2024 Paper Solutions with NEET Answer Key: • NEET Answer Key 2024 |...
    📅🆓NEET Rank & College Predictor 2024: infinitylearn.... Have you heard of Inductive and Deductive Reasoning? How is it used in Mathematics? What does Conjecture mean? Watch this video to know more…
    To watch more High School Math videos, click here - bit.ly/HighSch...
    Infinity Learn brings learning to life through its captivating educational videos. To Know More, visit infinitylearn....
    NCERT Solutions for Class 6 to 12 - Free CBSE NCERT Solutions
    infinitylearn....
    New videos every week. To stay updated, subscribe to our RUclips channel : bit.ly/DontMemo...
    Register on our website to gain access to all videos and quizzes:
    infinitylearn....
    ✅Download the Infinity Learn APP Now➡️ vsbpz.app.link...
    ✔Join us on Facebook: / infinitylearn.srichait...
    ✔Follow us on Instagram: / infinitylearn_by_srich...
    ✔Follow us on Twitter: / infinitylearn_
    #Mathematics #Induction #InfinityLearn #neet2024 #infinityLearnNEET #neetsyllabus #neet2025

Комментарии • 420

  • @InfinityLearn_NEET
    @InfinityLearn_NEET  2 года назад +12

    ✅Register here for CBSE Courses ➡ infinitylearn.com/cbse-fullcourse?RUclipsDME&AjkQ1YqLEE&Comment
    👉LIVE Classes
    👉Access to Assessments
    👉Excellent Content by Experts in Field

    • @tj-zb3yq
      @tj-zb3yq Месяц назад +4

      East or west Ajith katti sir is the best

    • @tj-zb3yq
      @tj-zb3yq Месяц назад +3

      East or west Ajith katti sir is the best

  • @elia643
    @elia643 Год назад +414

    This helped me remember:
    IN-ductive (as in the word IN-crease) is something that starts at something specific/small to explain something bigger/general (it "increases")
    DE-ductive (as in the word DE-crease) is something that starts at something general/big to explain something specific/small (it "decreases")

    • @filip2175
      @filip2175 Год назад +15

      hey thats a cool mnemonic manovuer lol, helped me too thanks

    • @novagalium
      @novagalium Год назад +5

      thank u you angel

    • @kyking9588
      @kyking9588 Год назад +12

      I'm gonna report you for being so clever and helpful. ❤

    • @jebae859
      @jebae859 Год назад +2

      very nice! thanks for sharing

    • @azizqurban4803
      @azizqurban4803 Год назад +6

      Your comment was more helpful than this long video.❤

  • @jacobsutton7853
    @jacobsutton7853 4 года назад +139

    I have sifted through so many explanations of this and have always been confused. The way you semantically explain these topics are SO HELPFUL. This is an amazing concise way of understanding this. Thank you

    • @InfinityLearn_NEET
      @InfinityLearn_NEET  4 года назад +18

      Thank you so much Jacob for your appreciation. We hope that you understood the concept. We are glad that it was helpful for you. This really motivates us to do better.😊😊

    • @nooruddin769
      @nooruddin769 2 года назад +2

      Same here bro

  • @bredstic9836
    @bredstic9836 4 года назад +311

    what a nice and simple way to explain this! i was struggling to see the difference in my sociology studies hahah thank you so much for the video!

    • @holleyjane7993
      @holleyjane7993 4 года назад +7

      Same, the struggles real with some stuff this course is throwing at me lol. Spending more time understanding the words in a question then the actual question itself!

    • @user-qj5yt1pt5i
      @user-qj5yt1pt5i 2 года назад +2

      me learning it for geometry

    • @brian_mcnulty
      @brian_mcnulty Год назад +1

      If you watch the next video, it gets pretty wild.

  • @Girlintherocket
    @Girlintherocket 4 года назад +313

    Aren’t all mangoes raw? Ripe and unripe perhaps. 😂

  • @WizaGaming
    @WizaGaming 4 года назад +644

    *Light Yagami has entered the chat

    • @waryful3
      @waryful3 4 года назад +56

      *_on January 21, 2004, serving a life sentence in a California prison, Beyond Birthday died if a mysterious heart attack._*

    • @WizaGaming
      @WizaGaming 4 года назад +3

      @@waryful3 😂🤣

    • @waryful3
      @waryful3 4 года назад +10

      @@WizaGaming have you read bb murder cases?

    • @WizaGaming
      @WizaGaming 4 года назад +2

      @@waryful3 no lol

    • @merrychristoffer2350
      @merrychristoffer2350 4 года назад +10

      I like Death note

  • @weabooheaven239
    @weabooheaven239 2 года назад +25

    I understood with such short amount of time. Very good usage of examples and not just explaining it. Plenty thanks!

    • @LemCatOfficial
      @LemCatOfficial 7 месяцев назад

      This was also very helpful for me. ❤

  • @teammonke2726
    @teammonke2726 3 года назад +6

    Not sure if this was what it was supposed to be used for, but as a nursing student... this was the easiest explanation I have ever seen. Thank you.

    • @InfinityLearn_NEET
      @InfinityLearn_NEET  3 года назад

      Most welcome, Team Monke!
      We are glad you liked our video.
      Keep watching! 🙂🙂

  • @supersaiyan7046
    @supersaiyan7046 4 года назад +33

    I primarily think with deductive reasoning and I have a friend who primarily thinks with inductive reasoning. The issue is that she fails to realize her inductions are probabilities based on an educated guess. She mistakes her inductions to be true certainties. She has a lot of emotional biases from particular personal experiences that cause her to stereotype unfairly.

    • @solaryon8711
      @solaryon8711 2 года назад +13

      Youd be hard pressed to function in this world with primarily, or only, deductive reasoning. Many of the premises in deductive reasoning can only be reached by induction in the first place. Deductive conclusions require that the premises are inherently true by definition. In the video example "all fruits have seeds" is a premise that was reached by induction. It is perfectly possible that a mango could grow without seeds through genetic mutation, so the deduced conclusion required induction. Deductive conclusions are often useless because of this. You should already know the conclusion because it is necessary based on the established premises. Inductive reasoning is the foundation of pretty much all scientific investigation.

    • @patriotarborist711
      @patriotarborist711 2 года назад +4

      The other reply is right on. I will add that inductive reasoning leads to generalizations, which is exactly what early man used to survive. Think of how many lions you would need to run into before you concluded they are to be avoided unless you were hunting them, etc. Intelligent thinkers use inductive reasoning almost exclusively. How else could you make quick decisions, or life-changing choices?

    • @melaniepatterson1636
      @melaniepatterson1636 Год назад +1

      question? are you still her friend 2+ years later, or did this issue ruin the friendship in the long run?🧐

    • @supersaiyan7046
      @supersaiyan7046 Год назад

      @@melaniepatterson1636 it ruined the friendship in the long run. She had anxiety disorders

  • @arguspersa7515
    @arguspersa7515 3 года назад +12

    Explained it better than my teacher and it was under 5 minutes too (QVQ)

  • @GeoCalifornian
    @GeoCalifornian 5 лет назад +55

    Thank you for the fundamentals.

  • @qadirbux333
    @qadirbux333 11 месяцев назад +1

    Teacher delivered 1 hour lecture ,I didn't understand but you made me understand within 3 minutes.

  • @Runsheeg53633
    @Runsheeg53633 2 года назад +2

    Your energy and enthusiasm are unmatched. thanks.

  • @matthewbrown9029
    @matthewbrown9029 Год назад +5

    Thank you for the great explanation! Question: Aren't the statements in the deductive model specific statements? Directly compared to the statements used in the inductive explanation, I see no difference. Please help so I can finally understand this!

  • @EdaRaine
    @EdaRaine 7 месяцев назад +1

    THANK YOU! your the only video that explained it so clearly and amazingly THANK YOU!

  • @nadaalbarwani9451
    @nadaalbarwani9451 4 года назад +10

    Very simplified and understandable! Thank you

  • @yackgobus9060
    @yackgobus9060 6 месяцев назад +1

    "Mango is a fruit" and "all mangoes are fruits" mean exactly the same thing, but these sentences are considered to be both general and specific statements. I don't think that this video is as clear and great as everyone is making it out to be.

    • @user-hm5bk4lh5v
      @user-hm5bk4lh5v 6 месяцев назад +1

      That's a great observation you have there. Actually "Mango is a fruit" and "all mangoes are fruits" would be quite a good example of deduction because that is literally what deduction is - just saying the same thing in different ways. A good analogy is having a jigsaw puzzle. You start with jigsaw pieces and once you finish the puzzle you still just have the same thing you started with - jigsaw pieces, but they have been rearranged.
      This video is arguably incorrect in its definition of deduction and induction. I say "arguably" because it uses a definition that is commonly used in various academic fields by people with an insufficient understanding of logic. The definitions offered in the video don't really offer value. Deduction is not reasoning from the general to the specific and induction is not reasoning from the specific to the general. In fact, you can use the exact same premises to draw inductive or deductive conclusions - it depends what you want.
      So, here is the actual (and meaningful) definition of deduction and induction:
      Deduction is any argument where it is claimed the conclusion is certain to be true if the reasons (premises) it is based on are true.
      Induction is any argument where it is claimed the reasons (premises) provided for believing the conclusion, increase the likelihood of the conclusion being true.
      I say "claimed" because you can have an invalid deduction (the conclusion does not follow with certainty based on the premises). Deductions are judged based on validity/invalidity and soundness/unsoundness. To be sound the deduction must be valid and the premises must be true.
      For an induction, you can have strong/weak arguments (depending on the support the premises offer for the conclusion) and cogent/uncogent arguments. A cogent argument would be a strong argument (premises make it highly likely that the conclusion is true) that also has true premises.
      Here is a real example of deduction:
      A
      B
      Therefore:
      A and B
      Or in words:
      I have a cat.
      I have a dog.
      Therefore:
      I have a cat and I have a dog.
      This is known as the "Conjunction rule of inference".
      Some things you will notice:
      1. It reasons from the specific - and yet it is still a deduction. Deductions can have general or specific premises.
      2. It doesn't offer any new information - deductions can't create new information because they are just revealing what is already indirectly known - they are drawing out the facts of the premises.
      3. Note the conclusion (A and B) contains the premises (A, B)
      4. You can judge the validity of the argument without knowing what the letters stand for based solely on its form. This is why deductive logic is known as also known as "formal" logic.
      Now let us make an induction:
      A
      B
      Therefore:
      C
      Or in words:
      I have a cat.
      I have a dog.
      Therefore:
      I like animals.
      Some things you will notice:
      1. It uses the exact same premises as the deduction - I have just changed the conclusion to be an inductive one. Inductions can have general or specific premises.
      2. The conclusion can still be wrong. Perhaps I hate animals and the only reason I have a cat and dog is because they were given to me by a friend and I don't want to offend my friend by getting rid of the animals. Or maybe I have kids and they like the animals.
      3. The conclusion (C) does not contain the premises (A and B).
      4. You can't judge the argument without knowing what the letters mean. There is no way to tell that A and B result in C unless you know their meaning.
      Final remarks. You might think to yourself that deduction is useless - given the conjunction example I gave you. But what you need to remember with a deduction is that it is made up of lots of small steps which are often obvious in isolation but they all add up to a none obvious conclusion. Eventually you end up with deductions that look like this:
      Starting premises:
      1: If T then (B or E)
      2: Not E and T
      So we can make the following deductions:
      3. T and not E (Commutativity rule of inference based on premise 2)
      4. T (Simplification rule of inference based on our deduced premise 3)
      5. B or E (Modus Ponens rule of inference based on premise 1 and our deduced premise 4)
      6. E or B (Commutativity rule of inference based on our deduced premise 5)
      7. Not E (Simplification rule of inference based on premise 2)
      Therefore:
      8. B (Disjunctive syllogism rule of inference based on deduced premises 6 and 7)
      I know you won't understand the argument I just presented, but I hope you can see that it is not obvious from the starting premises the conclusion is B. You needed to make lots of smaller deductions that add up the the final conclusion B.
      I hope this helped you.

  • @ILM2219
    @ILM2219 Год назад +4

    Great job! It is finally clear to me about inductive and deductive reasoning.😊

  • @usama57926
    @usama57926 5 лет назад +13

    please also make a series on Einstine Theory of Relativity

    • @InfinityLearn_NEET
      @InfinityLearn_NEET  5 лет назад +6

      Thanks for the suggestion :)

    • @asiong2752
      @asiong2752 4 года назад +4

      Einstein?

    • @usama57926
      @usama57926 4 года назад +1

      @@asiong2752 yes! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_relativity

  • @redfire174
    @redfire174 2 года назад +1

    this video made inductive and deductive reasoning more comprehensible for me.

  • @danyellemaduray965
    @danyellemaduray965 2 года назад +1

    The only, out of many videos and explanations... did this video make sense to me!!! Thank you!

  • @tbbbtoolsbooksbladebones556
    @tbbbtoolsbooksbladebones556 4 года назад +16

    It's incorrect. There's a different between conclusion and assumption. If one "Concludes that the mangoes are anything without examining all of the mangoes then it fails to be a conclusion and remains only as an assumption.

    • @downTo2Earth
      @downTo2Earth 3 года назад +6

      No let me help you out here and make an easier example for you. When a woman has dated 5 men who have all cheated on her, based on just little sample from the billions of men in the world she can still make a statement that men are cheats. This woman has not examined all men or dated all men but she has concluded based on the few she has been with. Yes so it may sound like an assumption to you but that’s her truth that all men are cheats. So I literally get what you are saying but it still makes sense that inductive reasoning makes you generalize stuff based on few specifics you know.

    • @hinatahir4140
      @hinatahir4140 3 года назад

      @@downTo2Earth what an explanation! 😂

  • @igor10234
    @igor10234 3 года назад +18

    Mathematical induction is actually a form of deductive reasoning. Also It has been said that induction is a reasoning from the specific to the general. However, there are many inductive arguments that do not have that form, for example, 'I saw her kiss him, really kiss him, so I'm sure she's having an affair.'

    • @pazesantos
      @pazesantos 3 года назад +10

      Good point. But I think it's important to understand that the argument is incomplete here. If you follow the "rabbit rule", you'd see that the element "affair" (that's in the conclusion), is missing in the premises. You could frame it in multiple ways, e.g. "I saw her kissing him. People kissing are always having an affair. So, she's having an affair". It seems to me that this is a deductive argument. Don't you think so?

    • @farhanaditya2647
      @farhanaditya2647 Год назад

      @@pazesantos No, it's not. Because not all people that are kissing are having an affair. You can, however, noticed that *most* people *you* have seen kissing are having an affair. Therefore, making the argument inductive.

    • @farhanaditya2647
      @farhanaditya2647 Год назад

      @@pazesantos It's also possible that the argument OP provided here is an abductive reasoning. Which mean the conclusion is the explanation to the premise, not an extrapolation or generalization to wider samples.
      Another example of abductive argument:
      1. _"I heard the door opened 5 at AM -> It's probably my husband that just returned from work"_
      The argument here doesn't suggest that most people that hear the door open in the morning mean their husband return. It just states the best explanation to *her* situation.
      The same thing can be said for _"I saw her kissing him -> She's having an affair"._ There can be many other explanations. It might be an act, it might be forced, but the best explanation (according to OP) is she's having an affair.

  • @JEkongz
    @JEkongz 3 года назад +4

    Now I get it. Thank you for explaining it clearly.

  • @brd8764
    @brd8764 4 года назад +2

    Conditional reasoning is reasoning that involves statements of the sort If A (Antecedent) then C (Consequent). This type of reasoning is ubiquitous; everyone engages in it. Indeed, the ability to do so may be considered a defining human characteristic.

  • @dascrazy8012
    @dascrazy8012 Год назад +44

    why is she screaming

  • @calsonambomatei8695
    @calsonambomatei8695 2 года назад

    Her illustrations were top-notch. I got it on the spot!

  • @reemara5679
    @reemara5679 2 года назад +2

    Thank you i needed this my connection was bad in mathematics and this was the topic and i had a hard time understanding with the powerpoint because it contains examples only.

  • @la1na._.m00n
    @la1na._.m00n 2 года назад +1

    LUV YOU BRO! UR A LIFESAVER!

  • @aswinkskarumalloor
    @aswinkskarumalloor 4 года назад +3

    Please upload more videos on biotechnology and molecular basis of inheritance
    Your videos on genetics and calculus were superrrrrb

  • @kwsentertainment1599
    @kwsentertainment1599 4 года назад +2

    Thank you for explaining it better than my teacher

  • @hanatesfaye5462
    @hanatesfaye5462 2 года назад +2

    What a great explanation!!!

  • @letstalkaboutit.7659
    @letstalkaboutit.7659 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for this. it really helped me to understand well inductive and deductive reasoning well.

  • @nitishgautam5728
    @nitishgautam5728 4 месяца назад

    2:12 this is an example of predicate logic but we know that statement 2 is false .... There exists some fruits which don't have seeds therefore premises is false so can't make sound argument

  • @user-eo8nj1uo4o
    @user-eo8nj1uo4o Год назад

    thank you, i have learned much better on the video rather than self studying

  • @prasanjitghosh7046
    @prasanjitghosh7046 Год назад

    The Best explanation.

  • @Golgi-Gyges
    @Golgi-Gyges Месяц назад

    At 2:10 Is the statement "all mangos are fruit" a general statement or a specific one? Or is that just a bad example?

  • @mohammadnaghshineh9311
    @mohammadnaghshineh9311 4 года назад +3

    Hello
    Thank you for your nice channel
    Would you please send videos about “ Logical Reasoning “ and “ Critical Thinking “

  • @christiangab1227
    @christiangab1227 3 года назад +3

    As always you always make great videos thank you ^^

    • @InfinityLearn_NEET
      @InfinityLearn_NEET  3 года назад

      You're most welcome Lakshmi and Thank you so much for your appreciation. We are glad that you understood the concept. You motivate us to do better. Keep watching our videos. 😊😊

  • @tsuifn5560
    @tsuifn5560 3 года назад +3

    now all i need is a note book and a rival

  • @lynnegaddy6839
    @lynnegaddy6839 Год назад

    Thank you! very helpful way to better understand the differences and good examples to understand as well.

  • @Bill0102
    @Bill0102 9 месяцев назад

    This content is transcendent. I read a kindred book that was a transformative journey. "The Art of Meaningful Relationships in the 21st Century" by Leo Flint

  • @dhj434
    @dhj434 4 года назад +1

    But how do we define what is a general statement and what is a specific statement? Mago is fruit can be a general statement I think....

  • @ishitagoel647
    @ishitagoel647 4 года назад +1

    Explained very well.
    Thanks for sharing this.

    • @InfinityLearn_NEET
      @InfinityLearn_NEET  4 года назад +1

      Thank you, Ishita!
      Glad you liked it.
      Happy Learning! 🙂🙂

  • @branhamchima
    @branhamchima 2 года назад

    Educative video with beautiful illustration.

  • @sudomeister1911
    @sudomeister1911 2 года назад +1

    Great video! Immensely helpful! Thanks!

  • @sharpsho0ter887
    @sharpsho0ter887 3 года назад +3

    1:18 why yes, yes it is

  • @free-naturalist8912
    @free-naturalist8912 4 месяца назад

    Thank you

  • @MartaniPanganSehat
    @MartaniPanganSehat 2 года назад

    Thank you. Love the example of manggo…

  • @bantipatil7049
    @bantipatil7049 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks

  • @yalichen2548
    @yalichen2548 2 года назад

    After watching your video, it became very easy to me.

  • @seeratsingh64
    @seeratsingh64 4 года назад +1

    Excellent explanation !

  • @himanshidhandravepoems2469
    @himanshidhandravepoems2469 2 года назад

    You are best teaching channnel please teach class 12 please

  • @shannalynwillett1897
    @shannalynwillett1897 4 года назад +3

    This was really helpful. Thank you. :)

  • @sanwalmalik3027
    @sanwalmalik3027 4 года назад

    What a way to teach..you made it easy ...

  • @nooruddin769
    @nooruddin769 2 года назад +1

    Whenever I watch any video of this channel, I am always 💯 percent Clear. Same in this case
    Thank you so much. You explained it brilliantly.....

  • @KittenLover84
    @KittenLover84 Год назад

    Thank you so much! This was a great explanation!

  • @elfavs7923
    @elfavs7923 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for the fundamentals ❤️

  • @DilshanMohamadRofiq
    @DilshanMohamadRofiq 4 часа назад

    So what are the points of this video???

  • @santhosh........
    @santhosh........ 5 лет назад +1

    Superrrr. Do more videos like this.
    It is interesting

  • @karambit6508
    @karambit6508 9 месяцев назад

    Great video, thanks!

  • @onesimachorei9337
    @onesimachorei9337 2 года назад

    explanation very very clear . thanks 🙏

  • @yamunaghodke8518
    @yamunaghodke8518 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you it was really helpful

  • @kcmartinez1472
    @kcmartinez1472 2 года назад

    Thankyou so much for this video presentation, it really helpful when it comes to my reflection paper huhu...

  • @alleyu8321
    @alleyu8321 3 года назад +2

    Oh my god im definitely exhausted i dont now why our school is asking 10 sentences in every inductive and deductive reasoning 😔😔😔😔😔😔😔

  • @sivasankaryagati3063
    @sivasankaryagati3063 5 лет назад +1

    Could you please make a video on cross product of vectors and dot product of vectors

  • @Shinyshady678
    @Shinyshady678 2 года назад

    Thank u mam for your all videos it helps me a lot. 👍👍

  • @mason7028
    @mason7028 5 лет назад +1

    it was so helpful for me, thnx

  • @maathiralshibani6367
    @maathiralshibani6367 3 года назад

    thank youu , these videos saved me

  • @bellax5905
    @bellax5905 2 года назад

    Thank you for explaining

  • @shahzadhameed6573
    @shahzadhameed6573 3 года назад

    such a simple method thanku

  • @estertabitha
    @estertabitha 3 года назад

    Thank you so much i really like your explanation

  • @BluespotKneeClinic
    @BluespotKneeClinic 2 года назад

    This lady is tops

  • @anafro_ru
    @anafro_ru 7 месяцев назад

    thank you for your video, very helpful and informative! And easy, which was the most importart part :D

  • @LiLgPnoy15
    @LiLgPnoy15 4 года назад

    Great video! Thank you Indian lady!

  • @ghulamalikhushk5312
    @ghulamalikhushk5312 4 года назад +12

    Find if all the fruits are raw inside the bucket :
    Don't memorise : mango have seeds.

  • @FelipeCampelo0
    @FelipeCampelo0 Год назад

    So deductive reasoning uses two categorical statements to reach a specific conclusion?

  • @frankh3057
    @frankh3057 4 года назад +1

    Did you get interviewed for Tricia Takanawa's position as well?

  • @zinminphyo1184
    @zinminphyo1184 2 года назад

    Thanks.

  • @ramildeasis2523
    @ramildeasis2523 4 года назад

    simple but great explanation

  • @niveditaghosh2311
    @niveditaghosh2311 2 года назад

    Thank you 💕

  • @user-qj5yt1pt5i
    @user-qj5yt1pt5i 2 года назад +1

    This helps me understand what is inductive reasoning and deductive reasoning is but I can't understand a word she is saying.

  • @Bhagabatiofficial
    @Bhagabatiofficial 2 года назад

    Tq so much mam☺☺☺😊😊😊

  • @anjedewrance3058
    @anjedewrance3058 4 года назад

    Welcome to Abstract Neuro sc. Keep up.

  • @corabatoon4931
    @corabatoon4931 4 года назад

    Thanks a lot I fully understand now

  • @sngraphics2141
    @sngraphics2141 4 года назад

    Thank you!

  • @AinRidzuan
    @AinRidzuan 3 года назад

    Easy to understand. Thank you.

    • @InfinityLearn_NEET
      @InfinityLearn_NEET  3 года назад

      You're most welcome. We are glad that you understood the concept. We are happy that we could help you learn. You motivate us to do better. Keep watching our videos : )

  • @tanesabduallah7106
    @tanesabduallah7106 2 года назад

    Thank you so much 😊

  • @usama57926
    @usama57926 5 лет назад +1

    very nice explanation

    • @InfinityLearn_NEET
      @InfinityLearn_NEET  5 лет назад

      I'm glad to hear that.
      Do check our facebook page too: bit.ly/DontMemoriseFacebook
      Happy Learning. :)

  • @k.i.r.t.i.i
    @k.i.r.t.i.i 2 года назад

    Nicely explained👍

  • @doesntmatter866
    @doesntmatter866 4 года назад +3

    You could have just said to the statement 2 of Deductive reasoning is all fruits is produced by a variety of seeds so the conclusion ends up all mangoes have seeds. BOOM

    • @XXXGaaraFan2013XXX69
      @XXXGaaraFan2013XXX69 3 года назад

      lol idk why you’d change statement 2... and also in your argument it fails to demonstrate that mangos have seeds

  • @Imagenator149
    @Imagenator149 4 года назад

    Thank you ma'am

  • @gautamkushwaha7871
    @gautamkushwaha7871 4 года назад

    Please make video on practical geometry it is very hard for me to understand the angles and construction

  • @hudakaif
    @hudakaif 2 года назад

    Thanks a lot ☺️...

  • @akashroy3447
    @akashroy3447 4 года назад +5

    I just realized Deductive reasoning is more logical than mathematics... (Especially calculus) 🙄 wow

  • @avocado5300
    @avocado5300 2 года назад

    Thanks,

  • @saramohamed.8403
    @saramohamed.8403 2 года назад

    Thank you soooo much❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @chanelhayley9240
    @chanelhayley9240 2 года назад

    Great explains

  • @joby9884
    @joby9884 3 года назад

    Wow, this saved my life

  • @arjayestorgio2603
    @arjayestorgio2603 2 года назад

    Thank you so much