Question
How do I practice chain of thought reasoning?
Quick Answer
Choose a decision you are currently facing or a position you hold on a contested topic. Open a blank document and write your reasoning chain in numbered steps, starting from your first premise and ending at your conclusion. Each step must connect to the next with an explicit warrant — a stated.
The most direct way to practice chain of thought reasoning is through a focused exercise: Choose a decision you are currently facing or a position you hold on a contested topic. Open a blank document and write your reasoning chain in numbered steps, starting from your first premise and ending at your conclusion. Each step must connect to the next with an explicit warrant — a stated reason why step N leads to step N+1. Do not skip steps. Do not write what you believe; write how you got there. When you finish, review each transition. Mark any step where the connection relies on an unstated assumption, an unverified fact, or a feeling rather than evidence. Count the gaps. If you found fewer than two, you were not honest enough — go back and tighten the chain.
Common pitfall: Performing externalization as transcription rather than construction. The most common failure is writing down what you already believe in polished form rather than actually constructing the chain step by step and discovering its structure as you write. Transcription produces a document that confirms your conclusion. Construction produces a document that tests it. If your externalized reasoning chain contains no surprises — no moments where you paused because the next link was weaker than you expected — you transcribed your belief rather than externalized your reasoning. The test is simple: did writing the chain change anything about how you hold the conclusion? If not, you performed the ritual without the practice.
This practice connects to Phase 10 (Externalization Mastery) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
Learn more in these lessons