by means of induction - translation to italian
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by means of induction - translation to italian

FORM OF MATHEMATICAL PROOF
Proof by induction; Proof of mathematical induction; Three forms of mathematical induction; Complete induction; Inductive hypothesis; Strong induction; Mathematical Induction; Induction, Mathematical; Inductive proof; Induction proof; Principle of mathematical induction; Math induction proof; Mathematical induction Proof; Course of values induction; Induction (math); Induction (maths); Induction (mathematics); Axiom of induction; Math induction; Induction theorem; Double induction; Induction hypothesis; Principle of induction; Basis step; By induction; Proof By Induction; Mathematical Proof By Induction; Mathematical Proof Of Induction; Proof Of Mathematical Induction; Proof By Mathematical Induction; Proof Of Induction; Course-of-values induction; Base case (induction); Method of induction; Induction step; Inductive step; Prefix induction; Inductive analysis

by means of induction      
Induttivamente
electromagnetic induction         
  • A current clamp
  • alt=
  • left
  • left
  • left
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  • A solenoid
PRODUCTION OF VOLTAGE BY A VARYING MAGNETIC FIELD
Faraday-Lenz law; Induces; Magnetic Induction; Faraday's law induction; Electric mutual inductivity; Magnetic mutual inductivity; Magnetic self-inductivity; Electric self-inductivity; Induction (electricity); Faraday's Induction Law; Induction (electricity and magnetism); Induced current; Faraday's Law of Induction; Faraday's Law Of Induction; Faradays law; Parasitic induction; Faraday's Laws of Induction; Faradays Law; Induksioni Elektromagnetik; Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction; EM induction; Faraday–Lenz law; Magneto-induction
induzione elettromagnetica (tecnologia avanzata nella produzione di corrente elettrica con variazioni nel campo magnetico)
inductive method         
  • Argument terminology
METHOD OF REASONING IN WHICH A BODY OF OBSERVATIONS IS SYNTHESIZED TO HYPOTHESIZE A GENERAL PRINCIPLE
Inductive argument; Inductive logic; Logic induction; Weak induction; Induction (logic); À particularis; Induction (philosophy); Identification by next value; Inductive arguments; Enumerative induction; Inductive reason; A particularis; Inductive Logic; Induction by enumeration; Inductive method; Inductive inference; Scientific induction; Logical induction; Biases in inductive reasoning; History of inductive reasoning; Inductive generalization; Statistical generalization; Comparison of inductive and deductive reasoning; Comparison of deductive and inductive reasoning; Criticism of inductive reasoning; Anecdotal generalization; Inductive prediction; Inductive proofs
metodo induttivo

Definition

means-tested
A grant or benefit that is means-tested varies in amount depending on a means test.
...means-tested benefits.
ADJ

Wikipedia

Mathematical induction

Mathematical induction is a method for proving that a statement P ( n ) {\displaystyle P(n)} is true for every natural number n {\displaystyle n} , that is, that the infinitely many cases P ( 0 ) , P ( 1 ) , P ( 2 ) , P ( 3 ) , {\displaystyle P(0),P(1),P(2),P(3),\dots }   all hold. Informal metaphors help to explain this technique, such as falling dominoes or climbing a ladder:

Mathematical induction proves that we can climb as high as we like on a ladder, by proving that we can climb onto the bottom rung (the basis) and that from each rung we can climb up to the next one (the step).

A proof by induction consists of two cases. The first, the base case, proves the statement for n = 0 {\displaystyle n=0} without assuming any knowledge of other cases. The second case, the induction step, proves that if the statement holds for any given case n = k {\displaystyle n=k} , then it must also hold for the next case n = k + 1 {\displaystyle n=k+1} . These two steps establish that the statement holds for every natural number n {\displaystyle n} . The base case does not necessarily begin with n = 0 {\displaystyle n=0} , but often with n = 1 {\displaystyle n=1} , and possibly with any fixed natural number n = N {\displaystyle n=N} , establishing the truth of the statement for all natural numbers n N {\displaystyle n\geq N} .

The method can be extended to prove statements about more general well-founded structures, such as trees; this generalization, known as structural induction, is used in mathematical logic and computer science. Mathematical induction in this extended sense is closely related to recursion. Mathematical induction is an inference rule used in formal proofs, and is the foundation of most correctness proofs for computer programs.

Although its name may suggest otherwise, mathematical induction should not be confused with inductive reasoning as used in philosophy (see Problem of induction). The mathematical method examines infinitely many cases to prove a general statement, but does so by a finite chain of deductive reasoning involving the variable n {\displaystyle n} , which can take infinitely many values.