"False conclusions" refers to incorrect or mistaken judgments or decisions made based on incomplete or inaccurate information. It means drawing wrong or invalid inferences or assumptions.
Full definition
As a literary agent, I fell victim to the
same false conclusions I think most readers do, that e-books are easily produced from paper books.
There're things witnessed that can not be explained away, at least not in a way that neatly tucks everything in, folds it up and demonstrates that there's nothing behind it other than
false conclusions derived from brain functions.
Evaluations of the effects of teacher, school, and family influences on the development of non-cognitive skills could lead to
false conclusions if the assessments used are biased by distinct frames of reference.
(Chief Investment Officer) • Your Brain Is Primed To
Reach False Conclusions (fivethirtyeight) • Jonathan Ive and the Future of Apple: How an industrial designer became Apple's greatest product.
This detailed account of his life also gives us the opportunity to see behind the man, to follow him not only to his successes but also up the many blind alleys and
towards false conclusions: his ambitions, his mistakes and his foibles, his wheeling and dealing, and his disappointments.
Our lost faith in public education has led us to
other false conclusions, including the conviction that teachers unions protect «bad apples.»
Spooked by its
own false conclusions about the threat, the Bush administration hurried its diplomacy, short - circuited its war planning, and assembled an agonizingly incompetent occupation.
So began a fundraising pitch from Inside Climate News, a investigative journalism outfit starting from false premises to
reach false conclusions.
This statement is false and misleading, and is a classic example of one of the favorite tactics of climate change deniers: the use of short time periods to
draw false conclusions about longer - term trends.
When we read Aeterni Patris as a whole, we see that Leo framed the revival of Christian philosophy chiefly in the context of the ongoing political problems: «
False conclusions concerning divine and human things, which originated in the schools of philosophy, have now crept into all the orders of the State.»
These happy vibes are heard by a founder's «happy ears» — often leading the founder to draw
false conclusions about the true level of potential VC interest.
«Railway data alone, and without proper context, can lead to
false conclusions about the root cause of an issue,» CP spokesperson Jeremy Berry said in an email.
There has been much spurious research and
false conclusions drawn by those known as «anti-Mormons» to lead people to a bad impression of a man who was about as good a man who ever lived - save Jesus, of course.
Short cuts, of the kind that Concept Art peddles, are based on the banal and
false conclusion that the development of the productive forces renders all work superfluous.
He ended up running away after I pointed out his selective argumentation and
false conclusions.
I do not think that people are inherently dishonest, I simply know the mind plays many tricks, and people will often draw conclusions that are false, and then build on
those false conclusions to create all new false conclusions.
When these axioms are used in even perfect logic, they lead to
false conclusions.
Among the licit means are: espionage, stratagems, ambuscades, etc.; these are allowed because they are not based on lies pure and simple, but merely furnish the enemy an occasion for drawing
false conclusions 14
You rightly conclude that it is
a false conclusion, then, to argue that this same faith must be made to accommodate recent scientific theories.
You lacked clear thinking in
your false conclusion, just own up to it.
Again, because you misunderstand something, and lack nuance, you make assumptions and
false conclusions.