a basis or cause, as for some belief, action, fact, event, etc.:the reason for declaring war.
a statement presented in justification or explanation of a belief or action.
the mental powers concerned with forming conclusions, judgments, or inferences.
sound judgment; good sense.
normal or sound powers of mind; sanity.
Philosophy[Logic.]a premise of an argument.
Philosophy
the faculty or power of acquiring intellectual knowledge, either by direct understanding of first principles or by argument.
the power of intelligent and dispassionate thought, or of conduct influenced by such thought.
[Kantianism.]the faculty by which the ideas of pure reason are created.
bring (someone) to reason, to induce a change of opinion in (someone) through presentation of arguments; convince:The mother tried to bring her rebellious daughter to reason.
by reason of, on account of; because of:He was consulted about the problem by reason of his long experience.
in or within reason, in accord with reason; justifiable; proper:She tried to keep her demands in reason.
stand to reason, to be clear, obvious, or logical:With such an upbringing it stands to reason that the child will be spoiled.
with reason, with justification; properly:The government is concerned about the latest crisis, and with reason.
v.i.
to think or argue in a logical manner.
to form conclusions, judgments, or inferences from facts or premises.
to urge reasons which should determine belief or action.
v.t.
to think through logically, as a problem (often fol. by out).
to conclude or infer.
to convince, persuade, etc., by reasoning.
to support with reasons.
Latin ratiōn- (stem of ratiō) ratio
Old French reisun, reson
Middle English resoun, reisun (noun, nominal) 1175–1225
rea′son•er, n.
1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged purpose, end, aim, object, objective. Reason,cause,motive are terms for a circumstance (or circumstances) which brings about or explains certain results. A reason is an explanation of a situation or circumstance which made certain results seem possible or appropriate:The reason for the robbery was the victim's display of his money.The cause is the way in which the circumstances produce the effect, that is, make a specific action seem necessary or desirable:The cause was the robber's extreme need of money.A motive is the hope, desire, or other force which starts the action (or an action) in an attempt to produce specific results:The motive was to get money to buy food for his family.
2.See corresponding entry in Unabridged excuse, rationalization.
3.See corresponding entry in Unabridged understanding, intellect, mind, intelligence.
15.See corresponding entry in Unabridged persuade.
The construction reasonisbecause is criticized in a number of usage guides:The reason for the long delays was because the costs greatly exceeded the original estimates.One objection to this construction is based on its redundancy: the word because (literally, by cause) contains within it the meaning of reason; thus saying the reasonisbecause is like saying "The cause is by cause,'' which would never be said. A second objection is based on the claim that because can introduce only adverbial clauses and that reasonis requires completion by a noun clause. Critics would substitute that for because in the offending construction:The reason for the long delays in completing the project was that the costs. …Although the objections described here are frequently raised, reasonisbecause is still common in almost all levels of speech and occurs often in edited writing as well.A similar charge of redundancy is made against thereasonwhy, which is also a well-established idiom:The reason why the bill failed to pass was the defection of three key senators.
the faculty of rational argument, deduction, judgment, etc
sound mind; sanity
a cause or motive, as for a belief, action, etc
an argument in favour of or a justification for something
the intellect regarded as a source of knowledge, as contrasted with experience
grounds for a belief; a premise of an argument supporting that belief
by reason of ⇒ because of
in reason, within reason ⇒ within moderate or justifiable bounds
it stands to reason ⇒ it is logical or obvious
listen to reason ⇒ to be persuaded peaceably
reasons of State ⇒ political justifications for an immoral act
(when tr, takes a clause as object)to think logically or draw (logical conclusions) from facts or premises
(intransitive) usually followed bywith: to urge or seek to persuade by reasoning
(transitive) often followed byout: to work out or resolve (a problem) by reasoning
Etymology: 13th Century: from Old French reisun, from Latin ratiō reckoning, from rērī to thinkˈreasonerUSAGE The expression the reason is because… should be avoided. Instead one should say either this is because… or the reason is that…
Forum discussions with the word(s) "reason out" in the title: