Which preposition to use with induction
Have these creatures, that you and I profess to know something about, no faces, gestures, gabble; no folly, no absurdity, no induction of French education upon the abstract idea of men and women; no similitude nor dissimilitude to English?
The first of these laws is universal and irreversible; the second is an induction from a vast number of observations, though it may possibly, and even probably, have to admit of exceptions.
[Christian ritual for induction into the faith] baptism, christening, chrism; circumcision; baptismal regeneration; font.
The prelude was only an induction to the 'song,'which was eventually poured forth in the Lamia volume, and especially (as our poet opined) in Hyperion.
It will be found that the intuition works most readily in respect to those subjects which most habitually occupy our thought; and according to the physiological correspondences which we have been considering this might be accounted for on the physical plane by the formation of brain-channels specially adapted for the induction in the molecular system of vibrations corresponding to the particular class of ideas in question.
PAGE. Is it not a shame to see this old dunce learning his induction at these years?
" Although sufficiently ample grounds are not afforded in the field of politics, for a satisfactory induction by a comparison of the effects, the causes may, in all cases, be made the subject of specific experiment.
I have as little faith as Mr. Carlyle would have in saying: 'Go to, let us make'-an induction about words, or anything else.
In indirect psychic induction, that is to say in cases in which psychic vibrations are aroused by induction without deliberate attempt or design to influence any particular person or persons, there is noted the manifestation of a peculiar law of attraction and repulsion along psychic lines.
Intellect against the Moral Sense; Induction against Deduction and Intuition; Knowledge against Reverence; and so on and on to the utter weariness of one reader, if of no more.
Hippocrates, when he ridiculed the quacks of his day, and collected the facts and phenomena of disease, and inferred from them the proper treatment of it, was as much the father of induction as Bacon himself.
Faraday had demonstrated that this retarding was caused by induction between the electricity in the wire and the water about the cable.
An object which is electrified will by induction electrify another object situated some distance away.
We do not know and we have every indication and induction for the most oppositely contrary conclusions.
"I have rather, however," he says, "been desirous of discovering new facts and new relations dependent on magneto-electric induction than of exalting the force of those already obtained, being assured that the latter would find their development hereafter."