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    Successive \Suc*ces"sive\, a. [Cf. F. successif. See {Succeed}.]
    1. Following in order or in uninterrupted course; coming
    after without interruption or interval; following one
    after another in a line or series; consecutive; as, the
    successive revolution of years; the successive kings of
    Egypt; successive strokes of a hammer.

    Send the successive ills through ages down. --Prior.

    2. Having or giving the right of succeeding to an
    inheritance; inherited by succession; hereditary; as, a
    successive title; a successive empire. [Obs.] --Shak.

    {Successive induction}. (Math.) See {Induction}, 5.

    Induction \In*duc"tion\, n. [L. inductio: cf. F. induction. See
    {Induct}.]
    1. The act or process of inducting or bringing in;
    introduction; entrance; beginning; commencement.

    I know not you; nor am I well pleased to make this
    time, as the affair now stands, the induction of
    your acquaintance. --Beau. & Fl.

    These promises are fair, the parties sure,
    And our induction dull of prosperous hope. --Shak.

    2. An introduction or introductory scene, as to a play; a
    preface; a prologue. [Obs.]

    This is but an induction: I will draw
    The curtains of the tragedy hereafter. --Massinger.

    3. (Philos.) The act or process of reasoning from a part to a
    whole, from particulars to generals, or from the
    individual to the universal; also, the result or inference
    so reached.

    Induction is an inference drawn from all the
    particulars. --Sir W.
    Hamilton.

    Induction is the process by which we conclude that
    what is true of certain individuals of a class, is
    true of the whole class, or that what is true at
    certain times will be true in similar circumstances
    at all times. --J. S. Mill.

    4. The introduction of a clergyman into a benefice, or of an
    official into a office, with appropriate acts or
    ceremonies; the giving actual possession of an
    ecclesiastical living or its temporalities.

    5. (Math.) A process of demonstration in which a general
    truth is gathered from an examination of particular cases,
    one of which is known to be true, the examination being so
    conducted that each case is made to depend on the
    preceding one; -- called also {successive induction}.

    6. (Physics) The property by which one body, having
    electrical or magnetic polarity, causes or induces it in
    another body without direct contact; an impress of
    electrical or magnetic force or condition from one body on
    another without actual contact.

    {Electro-dynamic induction}, the action by which a variable
    or interrupted current of electricity excites another
    current in a neighboring conductor forming a closed
    circuit.

    {Electro-magnetic induction}, the influence by which an
    electric current produces magnetic polarity in certain
    bodies near or around which it passes.

    {Electro-static induction}, the action by which a body
    possessing a charge of statical electricity develops a
    charge of statical electricity of the opposite character
    in a neighboring body.

    {Induction coil}, an apparatus producing induced currents of
    great intensity. It consists of a coil or helix of stout
    insulated copper wire, surrounded by another coil of very
    fine insulated wire, in which a momentary current is
    induced, when a current (as from a voltaic battery),
    passing through the inner coil, is made, broken, or
    varied. The inner coil has within it a core of soft iron,
    and is connected at its terminals with a condenser; --
    called also {inductorium}, and {Ruhmkorff's coil}.

    {Induction pipe}, {Induction port}, or {Induction valve}, a
    pipe, passageway, or valve, for leading or admitting a
    fluid to a receiver, as steam to an engine cylinder, or
    water to a pump.

    {Magnetic induction}, the action by which magnetic polarity
    is developed in a body susceptible to magnetic effects
    when brought under the influence of a magnet.

    {Magneto-electric induction}, the influence by which a magnet
    excites electric currents in closed circuits.

    {Logical induction}, (Philos.), an act or method of reasoning
    from all the parts separately to the whole which they
    constitute, or into which they may be united collectively;
    the operation of discovering and proving general
    propositions; the scientific method.

    {Philosophical induction}, the inference, or the act of
    inferring, that what has been observed or established in
    respect to a part, individual, or species, may, on the
    ground of analogy, be affirmed or received of the whole to
    which it belongs. This last is the inductive method of
    Bacon. It ascends from the parts to the whole, and forms,
    from the general analogy of nature, or special
    presumptions in the case, conclusions which have greater
    or less degrees of force, and which may be strengthened or
    weakened by subsequent experience and experiment. It
    relates to actual existences, as in physical science or
    the concerns of life. Logical induction is founded on the
    necessary laws of thought; philosophical induction, on the
    interpretation of the indications or analogy of nature.

    Syn: Deduction.

    Usage: {Induction}, {Deduction}. In induction we observe a
    sufficient number of individual facts, and, on the
    ground of analogy, extend what is true of them to
    others of the same class, thus arriving at general
    principles or laws. This is the kind of reasoning in
    physical science. In deduction we begin with a general
    truth, which is already proven or provisionally
    assumed, and seek to connect it with some particular
    case by means of a middle term, or class of objects,
    known to be equally connected with both. Thus, we
    bring down the general into the particular, affirming
    of the latter the distinctive qualities of the former.
    This is the syllogistic method. By induction Franklin
    established the identity of lightning and electricity;
    by deduction he inferred that dwellings might be
    protected by lightning rods.

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