"Erroneous conclusions" means drawing or reaching incorrect or mistaken judgments, results, or beliefs based on inaccurate or flawed information or reasoning.
Full definition
Not properly accounting for differences between business owners and non business owners in studies of household wealth can lead to
erroneous conclusions about the significance of different saving motives.
That may lead buyers and sellers to
erroneous conclusions about a home's value, the prevalence of distressed sales, or the costs involved in a transaction, to name a few things.
But rather than writing off cancer immunotherapy, some researchers argue that the agents have been examined in the wrong way, resulting
in erroneous conclusions.
Pulsars, those spinning, superdense neutron stars that send powerful «lighthouse beams» of radio waves and light flashing through the Universe, have been «lying about their ages,» leading astronomers, and possibly particle physicists, to
erroneous conclusions for the past 30 years, according to researchers using the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope.
However, because the guaranteed analysis values are only listed as minimums and maximums with no «floor» or «ceiling,» you can see where this type of calculation can lead to a very
erroneous conclusion with respect to the carbohydrate content.
An appellate court may only overturn findings of fact if it is established that the trial judge made a manifest error, ignored conclusive or relevant evidence, misunderstood the evidence, or drew
erroneous conclusions from the evidence.
In reality, though Ångström would have come to the same
erroneous conclusion even if the experiment had been done with the same amounts of CO2 at low pressure rather than at near - sea - level pressures.
Of course, it is possible to extrapolate from Calvinistic principles and arrive
at erroneous conclusions (like there's no need to preach the gospel), but that is not a necessary consequence of those principles as much as an example of faulty reasoning.
I think we are a long way from that conclusion (throwing the whole thing out) and need to step back and slowly and methodically go through what is available without jumping to
potentially erroneous conclusions.
It's worth noting that Ångström's
erroneous conclusion regarding saturation did not arise from his failure to understand how pressure affects absorption lines.
It would be sufficient for the 4th Circuit to reverse if it found that, on the facts, a
plainly erroneous conclusion as to damages had been reached below.
A visit to the Real Estate Council of Ontario (RECO) website (or the regulators» websites from other provinces) and a casual reading of a disciplinary case could give rise to
grossly erroneous conclusions.
Confounding might lead school systems to draw
erroneous conclusions about their teachers — conclusions that carry heavy costs to both teachers and society.
If you juxtapose the two sets of research — that people are growing up later but their earning potential is dictated earlier — you might reach
the erroneous conclusion that those two concepts are at odds with each other, that you need to grow up ASAP or you'll miss your best opportunity to be successful.
There's no end to
the erroneous conclusions one might draw from media coverage and statistics that focus only on Wall Street, on the megamergers and acquisitions, the biggest company deals, the glitziest initial public offerings, and the most public investments in American business.
The erroneous conclusion, moreover, is utterly negated by the fact that the target of the latest suit, Microsoft, saw its stock triple in price after the suit was brought.
Since it is all open for interpretation, the interpretation is open for having
an erroneous conclusion.
Unless people are jumping to
this erroneous conclusion because of your teaching, then you are not teaching grace in its most true and radical form.
Sweeping generalizations devoid of careful contextual analysis will lead inevitably to
erroneous conclusions.
People are explaining to you that your are misinterpreting scripture and explaining that if you do not study scripture and just take things at their superficial face value you are probably going to draw
an erroneous conclusion.
Therefore,
the erroneous conclusions is that sidewalk cracks cause babies to be born!
The minister said those who had jumped to
the erroneous conclusion that the major corruption scandals had been swept under the carpet should note that the present administration had zero tolerance for corruption and would, therefore, not close any criminal case.
Because of the flaws in standard statistical methods, even a properly conducted trial may reach
erroneous conclusions, writes mathematician - biostatistician Leonid Hanin of Idaho State University.
«There is bias in the underlying data that leads to
an erroneous conclusion, and strong evidence that is ignored which still strongly supports the Kurgan hypothesis,» he says.
There are many examples of antibodies with off - target binding leading to
erroneous conclusions, some of which will be discussed during this webcast, demonstrating the importance of application - specific validation.
Station locations change and methods evolve, so the climate data center warns that comparing normals between different 30 - year periods may lead to «
erroneous conclusions» about climate change.
«BP believes that an impartial view of the record does not support
the erroneous conclusion reached by the District Court.»
It even led the polymath Galileo Galilei, in his 1638 work Discourses and Mathematical Demonstrations Relating to Two New Sciences, to
the erroneous conclusion that «we can not speak of infinite quantities as being the one greater or less than or equal to another».