The process of reason is a methodical, causal progression from reality to knowledge to action. It begins with what exists, not with wishes, and it moves by logic, not by feelings, so you can move from raw observation to validated knowledge to rational action without gaps, floating abstractions. irrationality. or delusions.
First, a review of the steps of the process of reason:
Below is the full sequence, with each step’s function and its place in the hierarchy.
Choice to focus (the precondition)
You must choose to direct your mind to reality. This volitional act—sustained attention to facts—is the root of all subsequent cognition and the basic exercise of free will. Without focus, there is no reasoning. [1][2]Observation (perception as the base)
Percepts are the given; the senses are valid. You register entities, their attributes, actions, and relationships. No inference is drawn yet; you simply grasp what is there. [1][2]Isolation and description (attentional selection)
You isolate relevant units in the field of perception, identify distinguishing features, and name or ostensively point to them. You are preparing the material for abstraction. [2]Concept-formation (abstraction by essentials)
You differentiate and integrate the observed units, omitting measurements within a range to form a concept with a unit perspective (e.g., “length,” “metal,” “market”). This is how the mind condenses many concretes into one mental unit. [2][4]Definitions by essentials
You define each concept by genus and differentia, capturing its fundamental distinguishing characteristic(s) in the present context of knowledge. Definitions are objective and may be refined as context expands; referents do not change. [2][3]Propositional formulation (statement of facts)
You connect concepts in declarative form to identify facts: subject–predicate, cause–effect. Logic is the law of non-contradictory identification; you reject package-deals, equivocation, and stolen-concept fallacies. [3]Induction (generalization from cases to principles)
You move from observed concretes to universal principles by identifying causal connections that explain and necessitate the cases; you use experiment, controlled observation, and measurement to distinguish essentials from accidentals. [6][3]Deduction (implications from principles)
From validated principles, you derive implications for new cases, preserving logical necessity and checking for contradiction. Deduction without prior induction is groundless; induction without subsequent deduction is blind. [3]Reduction (validation back to the perceptual level)
You justify higher-level claims by tracing them stepwise back to first-hand observations; this enforces the primacy of existence and guards against floating abstractions. [3][2]Measurement and quantification
Where appropriate, you assign numbers to magnitudes, establish units, and relate quantities functionally; this tightens explanation and prediction. [6]Causal explanation (the “why”)
You integrate laws and mechanisms that account for observed regularities. Explanation is not a slogan; it is a demonstration of how an entity’s identity necessitates its actions. [6][3]Context-keeping and integration (the safeguard)
You integrate each new conclusion with the full context of your knowledge, updating definitions as needed and rejecting any claim that clashes with established facts. Knowledge is hierarchical and contextual; certainty is contextual. [2][3]Validation standards (evidence, burden, and the arbitrary)
You accept only that for which evidence exists; the burden of proof is on the asserter; the arbitrary—claims offered without evidence—is to be dismissed, not refuted. Degrees of support include possibility, probability, and certainty, all defined by evidence within context. [3][2]Error detection and correction
You actively test for contradictions, check premises, replicate observations, and refine methods. When errors appear, you identify their roots and correct them by reduction to facts. [3][6]Evaluation (fact–value integration)
With facts established, you appraise them by reference to an objective standard: the requirements of life proper to a rational being. Values are facts about what promotes or harms life; there is no dichotomy between the “is” and the “ought” when ethics is grounded in reality. [5]Value-judgment by principle (virtues)
You judge and choose by rational virtues—rationality, independence, integrity, honesty, justice, productiveness, pride—because they are principles of successful action in reality, not social conventions. [5]Deliberation: ends–means integration
You set goals, rank alternatives by causal efficacy and long-range consequences, and select means consistent with rights and the non-initiation of force. Short-range gains that undercut long-range life are rejected. [5][6]Decision and action
You act on your best rational judgment, implementing plans in reality. Action is the point of knowledge; knowledge that does not guide action is a pretense. [5]Feedback and continuous improvement
You observe outcomes, compare them to predictions and values, and iterate: update hypotheses, retune plans, and reintegrate the results into your knowledge hierarchy. Reason is a continuous, self-correcting process. [6][3]
Operational rules that apply at every step
- Primacy of existence: facts over feelings, reality over consensus. [1]
- Logic as method: identity, non-contradiction, excluded middle. [3]
- Objectivity: adhere to reality by method; keep context; integrate without contradiction. [2]
- Evidence first: observation and experiment under logical control; explanation in causal terms. [6]
- Moral sovereignty: no sacrifice of reason to emotion; no surrender of the mind to authority. [5]
Condensed checklist
- Focus → 2) Observe → 3) Isolate/describe → 4) Form concepts → 5) Define by essentials → 6) Form propositions → 7) Induce principles → 8) Deduce implications → 9) Reduce to facts → 10) Measure/quantify → 11) Explain causally → 12) Integrate contextually → 13) Validate (evidence/burden/arbitrary) → 14) Detect/correct error → 15) Evaluate by objective standard → 16) Judge by virtues → 17) Deliberate ends–means → 18) Decide/act → 19) Feedback/iterate. [1][2][3][5][6]
This is the complete process of reason: a disciplined chain from existence to evaluation to action, with every link tied back to reality and every step governed by logic. Evasion at any point breaks the chain. [1][3]
Sources
Alternate Naming suggestions for synthemon:
- Created Dual‑Aspect Theism
- Transcendent‑Creator Dual‑Aspect Worldview
- Providential Dual‑Aspect Monism (explicitly non‑pantheistic)
Apply the process of reason
- Define the components
- Providential thin theism: at least one extra‑natural conscious agent (G) exists and has, on rare occasions, acted in the world; otherwise, nature is stably law‑governed; reason/evidence have primacy.
- Dual‑aspect monism (for the cosmos): the created universe (S) is one substance with two fundamental, inseparable attributes/aspects—physical (P) and experiential/mental/spiritual (M). Every concrete event of S has both aspects, linked by lawful psychophysical correlations.
- Not pantheistic: G ≠ S. The cosmos is not identical with the divine; it is created/sustained by G or contained within G but not exhaustively identical with G.
- Check coherence (no contradiction)
- Distinctness: G and S are ontologically distinct kinds. That blocks pantheism.
- Dependence: S depends on G for its existence/laws; G does not depend on S.
- Law and providence: S runs by stable laws (including psychophysical bridges P↔M). Providence consists of rare, purposeful inputs by G that do not turn ordinary science into guesswork.
- Mind–matter: Within S, creatures’ mental life is the M‑aspect of the same events that have P‑aspects in brains/bodies—avoids interaction dualism while honoring correlations.
- Plausible modes of providence (do not overclaim; mark status as conjectural)
- Selection within indeterminacy: When S permits multiple lawful outcomes (e.g., quantum indeterminacy), G can select a particular branch without wholesale law‑violation. Status: speculative but coherent; no known contradiction with no‑signalling if selections respect overall statistical constraints.
- Boundary/initial‑condition steering: G sets or nudges large‑scale boundary conditions at rare junctures to realize specific ends.
- Exceptional suspensions: If you accept a vetted miracle, allow that G can very rarely override local regularities. This concedes that physical closure is not absolute.
- Minimal creed that integrates both
- There exists a transcendent, personal agent (G) distinct from the cosmos (S).
- G created S as a single, law‑governed substance with dual aspects, physical (P) and experiential (M).
- Psychophysical laws link P and M in creatures; ordinary life unfolds under stable laws.
- G very rarely and purposefully acts within S; claims of such action require strong evidence.
- Reason and evidence govern belief; ethics aim at the flourishing of rational, conscious life.
- Epistemology and method
- Public claims (including miracles) face a high evidential bar; default to natural explanations within S unless the evidence for intervention is compelling.
- Keep concepts stable: “supernatural” = not part of S’s ordinary causal order; “spiritual” (M) = the experiential aspect within S, not identical with G.
- Ethics and practice (thin, this‑worldly; open to added evidence)
- Standard: the life and flourishing of rational, conscious beings.
- Virtues: rationality, honesty, justice, independence, integrity, productiveness, pride; compassion as benevolence consistent with justice.
- Practices: truth‑seeking, gratitude, craftsmanship, benevolent cooperation, careful investigation of putative interventions.
- What would count against it (falsifiability/updates)
- Strong evidence that all mental phenomena reduce fully to P with no residual M‑aspect role would pressure the dual‑aspect thesis.
- If no well‑vetted interventions ever meet the evidential threshold, thin theism regresses toward deism.
- If future evidence showed G = S, that would push toward pantheism, contradicting the non‑pantheistic constraint—so definitions would need revision or the view rejected.
- What this view predicts
- A tight, law‑governed nature; psychophysical regularities between brain states and experience.
- Rare, well‑documented anomalies consistent with purposive agency, if any.
- No reliable, repeatable violation of basic conservation laws in ordinary contexts.
- Moral progress tied to knowledge, rights, and productive cooperation—not dogma.
Bottom line
- It is logically possible and methodologically acceptable to reason to a worldview where a transcendent agent creates a single, dual‑aspect cosmos and occasionally exercises providence—so long as you keep G distinct from the cosmos (avoiding pantheism), retain stable natural law for ordinary life, admit interventions only on strong evidence, and mark speculative mechanisms as such.