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Reasoning

Reasoning is the process of drawing conclusions from information, evidence, or beliefs. It aims to connect premises to outcomes in a way that is coherent or rational. Philosophical and scientific discussions distinguish normative accounts, which describe how rational agents should reason, from descriptive accounts, which describe how people actually reason in practice.

Major types include deductive, inductive, and abductive reasoning. Deductive reasoning seeks conclusions that follow necessarily from

Other important forms include causal reasoning, analogical reasoning, and probabilistic reasoning. In mathematics and logic, formal

Reasoning operates within human cognitive limits and can be influenced by biases and heuristics. It is studied

Applications range from argumentation, law, and science to everyday decision making. Despite its ideal of rigor,

its
premises;
if
the
premises
are
true
and
the
argument
is
valid,
the
conclusion
cannot
be
false.
Inductive
reasoning
moves
from
specific
observations
to
general
conclusions
and
yields
conclusions
that
are
probabilistic
rather
than
certain.
Abductive
reasoning
seeks
the
best
available
explanation
for
observed
data,
often
used
in
diagnosis
and
theory
formation.
deduction
is
studied
using
systems
such
as
propositional
and
predicate
logic.
In
statistics
and
artificial
intelligence,
probabilistic
and
Bayesian
methods
model
uncertainty
and
update
beliefs
with
new
evidence.
across
disciplines
such
as
psychology,
cognitive
science,
philosophy,
and
computer
science,
where
it
also
overlaps
with
automated
reasoning
and
algorithmic
problem
solving.
actual
reasoning
often
contends
with
ambiguity,
incomplete
data,
and
fallacies,
prompting
ongoing
efforts
to
improve
reasoning
processes
and
critical
thinking.