Inductive vs Sensing - What's the difference?
inductive | sensing |
(logic) of, or relating to logical induction
(physics) of, relating to, or arising from induction or inductance
introductory or preparatory
influencing; tending to induce or cause
* Milton
* Sir M. Hale
The act of sensation.
* 1987 , Brian Patrick Hendley, Plato, Time, and Education
As an adjective inductive
is (logic) of, or relating to logical induction.As a verb sensing is
.As a noun sensing is
the act of sensation.inductive
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- A brutish vice, / Inductive mainly to the sin of Eve.
- They may be inductive of credibility.
Derived terms
* inductive bias * inductive circuit * inductive coupling * inductive dimension * inductive effect * inductive embarrassment * inductive inference * inductive logic programming * inductive output tube * inductive reactance * inductive reasoning * inductive set * inductive statistics * inductive voltage dividersensing
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)- Second, the list of kinds of sensings that Socrates gave was thought to be an odd one. It included pleasures, pains, desires, and fears, as well as the more familiar examples of sight, hearing, smell, and the sensings of cold and of heat.