Inductive Reasoning
Inductive reasoning is used in geometry in a similar way. One might observe that in a few given rectangles, the diagonals are congruent. The observer could inductively reason that in all rectangles, the diagonals are congruent. Although we know this fact to be generally true, the observer hasn't proved it through his limited observations. However, he could prove his hypothesis using other means (which we'll learn later) and come out with a theorem (a proven statement). In this case, as in many others, inductive reasoning led to a suspicion, or more specifically, a hypothesis, that ended up being true.
The power of inductive reasoning, then, doesn't lie in its ability to prove mathematical statements. In fact, inductive reasoning can never be used to provide proofs. Instead, inductive reasoning is valuable because it allows us to form ideas about groups of things in real life. In geometry, inductive reasoning helps us organize what we observe into succinct geometric hypotheses that we can prove using other, more reliable methods. Whether we know it or not, the process of inductive reasoning almost always is the way we form ideas about things. Once those ideas form, we can systematically determine (using formal proofs) whether our initial ideas were right, wrong, or somewhere in between.
problums
1]Problem 1.1: Can inductive reasoning be used to formally prove something?
a]No.
2]Problem 1.2: What is the basic role of inductive reasoning in geometry?
a]Inductive reasoning leads people to form hypotheses based on observations made. Then these hypotheses can be tested rigorously using other methods. Inductive reasoning is how people make generalizations about sets of things and form hypotheses accordingly.
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