GENERALIZING - Definition. Was ist GENERALIZING
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Was (wer) ist GENERALIZING - definition

FORM OF ABSTRACTION WHEREBY COMMON PROPERTIES OF SPECIFIC INSTANCES ARE FORMULATED AS GENERAL CONCEPTS OR CLAIMS
Generalisation; Generalise; Generalize; Generalizing; Generalising; Generalised; Generalized; Generalization (mathematics); General case; Generalisations; Generalizations
  • When the mind makes a generalization, it extracts the essence of a concept based on its analysis of similarities from many discrete objects. The resulting simplification enables higher-level thinking.

Generalizing         
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Generalize.
generalize         
(generalizes, generalizing, generalized)
Note: in BRIT, also use 'generalise'
1.
If you generalize, you say something that seems to be true in most situations or for most people, but that may not be completely true in all cases.
'In my day, children were a lot better behaved'.-'It's not true, you're generalizing'...
It's hard to generalize about Cole Porter because he wrote so many great songs that were so varied.
VERB: V, V prep
2.
If you generalize something such as an idea, you apply it more widely than its original context, as if it was true in many other situations.
A child first labels the household pet cat as a 'cat' and then generalises this label to other animals that look like it.
VERB: V n across/to n
Generalize         
·vt To derive or deduce (a general conception, or a general principle) from particulars.
II. Generalize ·vt To bring under a genus or under genera; to view in relation to a genus or to genera.
III. Generalize ·vi To form into a genus; to view objects in their relations to a genus or class; to take general or comprehensive views.
IV. Generalize ·vt To apply to other genera or classes; to use with a more extensive application; to extend so as to include all special cases; to make universal in application, as a formula or rule.

Wikipedia

Generalization

A generalization is a form of abstraction whereby common properties of specific instances are formulated as general concepts or claims. Generalizations posit the existence of a domain or set of elements, as well as one or more common characteristics shared by those elements (thus creating a conceptual model). As such, they are the essential basis of all valid deductive inferences (particularly in logic, mathematics and science), where the process of verification is necessary to determine whether a generalization holds true for any given situation.

Generalization can also be used to refer to the process of identifying the parts of a whole, as belonging to the whole. The parts, which might be unrelated when left on their own, may be brought together as a group, hence belonging to the whole by establishing a common relation between them.

However, the parts cannot be generalized into a whole—until a common relation is established among all parts. This does not mean that the parts are unrelated, only that no common relation has been established yet for the generalization.

The concept of generalization has broad application in many connected disciplines, and might sometimes have a more specific meaning in a specialized context (e.g. generalization in psychology, generalization in learning).

In general, given two related concepts A and B, A is a "generalization" of B (equiv., B is a special case of A) if and only if both of the following hold:

  • Every instance of concept B is also an instance of concept A.
  • There are instances of concept A which are not instances of concept B.

For example, the concept animal is a generalization of the concept bird, since every bird is an animal, but not all animals are birds (dogs, for instance). For more, see Specialisation (biology).

Beispiele aus Textkorpus für GENERALIZING
1. I think you have to be very careful about generalizing from one conflict to the next.
2. It‘s pretty much a white Christian party." –– Dean, now head of the Democratic National Committee, generalizing about Republicans.
3. He accused the media of tarnishing the image of Islam by generalizing wrong actions of a few.
4. However, in generalizing the results to the U.S. population, researchers calculated a margin of error that swallows up the differences between years.
5. The rural economic organs across the country are engaged in widely introducing and generalizing usefulness of rape plant and experience of co–op farms in its cultivation.