Inductive Structures
Structures that move from specific observations to general conclusions — accumulating evidence before revealing the pattern or thesis.
4 structures across 1 subcategory
Evidence-First Discovery
Structures that let evidence accumulate before drawing conclusions, creating a sense of discovery.
Observation → Observation → Observation → General Conclusion
A structure that presents specific observations, examples, or data points first, then draws a general conclusion from the accumulated evidence.
Context → Evidence → Analysis → Thesis (late reveal)
A structure that deliberately withholds the main claim until late in the text, allowing the reader to arrive at the conclusion through the accumulated weight of evidence and reasoning.
Case A → Case B → Case C → Synthesis
A structure that presents multiple complete case studies or extended examples, each reinforcing the same pattern, before explicitly naming the pattern in a concluding synthesis.
Experience → Reflection → Deeper Reflection → Understanding
A structure that begins with raw experience or observation — sensory, emotional, or situational — and gradually builds toward understanding, letting meaning emerge from the described phenomenon rather than being imposed on it.