ratiocination

noun·/ˌræʃ.i.oʊ.sɪˈneɪ.ʃən/

Formal, step-by-step reasoning, logic worked through with deliberate, sometimes relentless precision. Intuition arrives whole, but ratiocination arrives assembled, each inference clicking into the next like a well-made chain.

Her ratiocination was flawless, but the room still resisted—proof and persuasion are not always the same craft.

Etymology

From Latin ratiocinari "to reason," from ratio "reckoning, account, reason." Thought as calculation, argument as ledger.

Related Words

deductionreasoning from general to particular
syllogisma classic form ratiocination often employs
casuistryreasoning through cases; adjacent, but more situational
dialecticreasoning through argument and counterargument