heuristics








adjective

  1. serving to indicate or point out; stimulating interest as a means of furthering investigation.
  2. encouraging a person to learn, discover, understand, or solve problems on his or her own, as by experimenting, evaluating possible answers or solutions, or by trial and error: a heuristic teaching method.
  3. of, relating to, or based on experimentation, evaluation, or trial-and-error methods.
  4. Computers, Mathematics. pertaining to a trial-and-error method of problem solving used when an algorithmic approach is impractical.

noun

  1. a heuristic method of argument.
  2. the study of heuristic procedure.

noun

  1. (functioning as singular) maths logic a method or set of rules for solving problems other than by algorithmSee also algorithm (def. 1), artificial intelligence

adjective

  1. helping to learn; guiding in discovery or investigation
  2. (of a method of teaching) allowing pupils to learn things for themselves
    1. maths science philosophyusing or obtained by exploration of possibilities rather than by following set rules
    2. computingdenoting a rule of thumb for solving a problem without the exhaustive application of an algorithma heuristic solution

noun

  1. (plural) the science of heuristic procedure
n.

“study of heuristic methods,” 1897, from heueristic (n.); also see -ics.

adj.

“serving to discover or find out,” 1821, irregular formation from Greek heuretikos “inventive,” related to heuriskein “to find” (from PIE *were- “to find;” cf. Old Irish fuar “I have found”) + -istic. As a noun, from 1860.

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