Dictionary Definition
ratiocination
Noun
1 the proposition arrived at by logical reasoning
(such as the proposition that must follow from the major and minor
premises of a syllogism) [syn: conclusion]
2 logical and methodical reasoning
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
ratiocination- Reasoning, conscious deliberate inference; activity or process of reasoning.
- Exact, valid and rational thought or reasoning
- A proposition arrived at by such thought
Extensive Definition
globalize article Reason is a way of
thinking characterized
by logic, analysis, and synthesis. It is often
contrasted with emotionalism, which is
thinking driven by desire, passion or prejudice. Reason attempts to
discover what is true or
what is
best. Reason often follows a chain of cause and
effect, and the word "reason" can be a synynom for "cause".
Reason has been a major subject of interest since the beginning of
philosophy.
Discussion about reason especially concerns:
- its origin
- its relationship to other related concepts such as language, logic, and consciousness
- its ability to help people decide what is true
The question of whether or not animals can reason has been a
subject of lively debate.
The concept of reason is closely
related to the concept of language, as reflected in the
meanings of the Greek word "logos", the root of logic, which translated into
Latin became
"ratio" and then in French
"raison", from which the English word "reason" was derived.
Also see practical
reason and speculative
reason.
Reason and logic
Reason is a type of thought. Logic is the attempt to make explicit the rules by which reason operates. The oldest surviving writing to explicitly and at length consider the rules by which reason operates are the works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle, especially Prior Analysis and Posterior Analysis. Although the Ancient Greeks had no separate word for logic as distinct from language and reason, Aristotle's neologism "syllogism" (syllogismos) identified logic clearly for the first time as a distinct field of study. When Aristotle referred to "the logical" (logos), he was referring more broadly to rational thought.Reason and logic can be thought of as distinct,
although logic is one important aspect of reason. Author Douglas
Hofstadter, in Gödel,
Escher, Bach, characterizes the distinction in this way. Logic
is what is done "inside the system" by formal steps such as
deduction. Reason is what is done "outside the system" by such
informal methods as skipping steps, working backward, drawing
diagrams, looking at examples, or seeing what happens if you change
the rules of the system. In the
present day there is an increasing tendency to use the terms
interchangeably, or to see logic as the most pure or the defining
form of reason.
Neurologist Terrence
Deacon, following the tradition of Charles
Peirce, has recently given a useful new description of what
makes reason distinctive compared to logic, as well as the information
processing of computers and at least most
animals, in modern terms. Like many
philosophers in the English tradition, such as Hobbes, Locke, and Hume, Peirce starts by
distinguishing the type of thinking which is most essential to
human reason as a type of associative
thinking. Reason, by his account, requires associating perceptions with icons. For example, the mind may
associate the image (or
icon) of smoke with not
only the image of fire,
but may also associate the word "smoke", or indeed any made-up
symbol, with the image of
fire.
Reason, truth, and “first principles”
In western philosophy, reason has a twofold
history. In classical
times a conflict developed between the Platonists and
the Aristotelians
concerning the role of reason in confirming truth.
Both Aristotle and Plato considered this
question. On the one hand, people use logic, deduction, and induction
to reach conclusions they think are true. Conclusions reached in
this way are considered more certain than basic sense perceptions.
On the other hand, if such reasoned conclusions are only built upon
sense perceptions, then our most logical conclusions can never be
said to be certain because they are built upon the very same
fallible perceptions they seek to better.
This leads to the question of first
principles. Empiricism
(associated with Aristotle and, more recently, with British
philosophers such as John Locke and
David
Hume) asserts that sensory impressions are primary. Idealism,
(associated with Plato and his school), claims that there is a
"higher" reality, from which certain people can directly arrive at
truth without the need of the senses, and that this higher reality
is the primary source of truth.
In Greek, “first
principles” are arkhai, starting points, and the
faculty used to perceive them is sometimes referred to in Aristotle
and Plato as “nous” which
was close in meaning to “awareness” or “consciousness”.
Among those who would argue that reason can not
be based upon experience alone, at least two major strands might be
discerned. On the one hand, philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle,
Alfarabi,
Avicenna,
Averroes,
Maimonides,
Aquinas and
Hegel are
sometimes said to have argued that reason must be fixed and
discoverable - perhaps by dialectic, analysis, or study. In the
vision of these thinkers, reason is divine or at least has divine
attributes. Such an approach allowed religious philosophers such as
Thomas
Aquinas and Étienne
Gilson to try to show that reason and revelation are
compatable.
On the other hand, since the Seventeenth
Century rationalists, reason has often been taken to be a
subjective faculty, or rather the unaided ability (pure reason) to
form concepts. For Descartes,
Spinoza and
Leibniz,
this was associated with significant developments in mathematics.
Kant attempted
to show that pure reason could form concepts (time and space) that
are the conditions of experience. Kant made his argument in
opposition to Hume, who denied that reason had any role to play in
experience.
Reason, language and mimesis
The recent writings of Deacon and Donald fit into
an older tradition which makes reason connected to language, and mimesis, but more specifically
the ability to create language as part of an internal
modelling of reality
specific to humankind. Other results are consciousness, and
imagination or
fantasy.
Thomas Hobbes describes the creation of “Markes,
or Notes of remembrance” (Leviathan
Ch.4) as “speech” (allowing by his definition that it is not
necessarily a means of communication or speech in the normal sense;
he was presumably thinking of "speech" as an English version of
"logos" in this
description). In the context of a language, these marks or notes
are called "Signes" by
Hobbes.
David Hume,
following John Locke
(and Berkeley),
who followed Hobbes, emphasized the importance of associative
thinking.
Concerning mimesis and fantasy being important in
defining reason, see for example Aristotle's Poetics,
De
Anima, On Dreams, and
On Memory
and Recollection (and for example the Introduction by Michael
Davis, printed with the 2002 translation by him and Seth
Benardete of the Poetics), Jacob Klein’s A Commentary on the
Meno Ch.5, and Tolkien's essay "On
Fairy Stories".
In more recent times, important areas of research
include the relationship between reason and language, especially in
discussions of origin
of language. Modern proponents of
a priori reasoning, at least with regards to language, include
Noam
Chomsky and Steven
Pinker, to whom Merlin
Donald and Terrence
Deacon can be usefully contrasted.
Reason and emotion or passion
In western literature, reason is often opposed to emotions or feelings -- desires, fears, hates, drives, or passions. Even in everyday speech, westerners tend to say for example that their passions made them behave contrary to reason, or that their reason kept the passions under control. Many writers, such as Nikos Kazantzakis, extol passion and disparage reason.It is also common, particularly since Freud, to describe
reason as the servant of the passions - the means of sorting out
our desires and then getting what we want, or perhaps even the
slave of the passions - allowing us to pretend to reason to the
object of our desire. Such feigned reason is called "rationalization".
Philosophers such as Plato, Rousseau, Hume, and
Nietzsche
have combined both views - making rational thinking not only a tool
of desires, but also something privileged within the spectrum of
desires, being itself desired, and not only because of its
usefulness in satisfying other desires.
Modern psychology has much to say on
the role of emotions in
belief formation. Deeper philosophical questions about the relation
between belief and reality are studied in the field of epistemology, which forms
part of the philosophical basis of science, a branch of human
activity that specifically aims to determine (certain types of)
truth by methods that
avoid dependence on the emotions of the researchers.
Reason and faith, especially in the “Greater West”
In theology, reason, as distinguished from faith, is the human critical faculty exercised upon religious truth whether by way of discovery or by way of explanation. Some commentators have claimed that Western civilization can be almost defined by its serious testing of the limits of tension between “unaided” reason and faith in "revealed" truths - figuratively summarised as Athens and Jerusalem, respectively. Leo Strauss spoke of a "Greater West" which included all areas under the influence of the tension between Greek rationalism and Abrahamic revelation, including the Muslim lands. He was particularly influenced by the great Muslim philosopher Al-Farabi. In order to consider to what extent Eastern philosophy might have partaken of these important tensions, it is perhaps best to consider whether dharma or tao may be equivalent to Nature (by which we mean physis in Greek).The limits within which reason may be used have
been laid down differently in different churches and periods of
thought: on the whole, modern religion tends to allow to reason a
wide field, reserving, however, as the sphere of faith the ultimate
(supernatural)
truths of theology.
References
See also
portalpar Logic
ratiocination in Arabic: عقل (فلسفة)
ratiocination in Bulgarian: Разум
ratiocination in Catalan: Raó
ratiocination in Czech: Rozum
ratiocination in Danish: Ræsonnere
ratiocination in German: Vernunft
ratiocination in Estonian: Mõistus
ratiocination in Modern Greek (1453-):
Λογική
ratiocination in Spanish: Razón
(filosofía)
ratiocination in Esperanto: Racio
ratiocination in Persian: عقل
ratiocination in French: Raison
ratiocination in Korean: 이성
ratiocination in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Ration
ratiocination in Italian: Ragione
ratiocination in Latvian: Prāts
ratiocination in Dutch: Rede
ratiocination in Japanese: 理性
ratiocination in Polish: Rozum
ratiocination in Portuguese: Razão
ratiocination in Quechua: Humu
ratiocination in Russian: Разум
ratiocination in Albanian: Arsyeja
ratiocination in Serbian: Разум
ratiocination in Finnish: Järki
ratiocination in Swedish: Förnuft
ratiocination in Vietnamese: Lý tính
ratiocination in Yiddish: סברה
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abstract thought, act of thought, brainwork, cerebration, cogitation, conceit, conception, conceptualization,
conclusion, creative
thought, deduction,
deductive reasoning, demonstration, discourse, discourse of
reason, discursive reason, excogitation, headwork, heavy thinking,
idea, ideation, illation, imageless thought,
induction, inductive
reasoning, intellection, intellectual
exercise, intellectualization,
judgment, logical
thought, mental act, mental labor, mental process, mentation, noesis, philosophy, proof, rationalism, rationality, rationalization,
rationalizing,
reason, reasonableness, reasoning, sequitur, sophistry, specious reasoning,
straight thinking, sweet reason, thinking, thinking aloud,
thinking out, thought